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••

•

ary

Voi.29,No. 246
Copyrighted 1981

11

11

THE WIND HoWL~ .AND ICICLEf5
eLINTED IN 1HI: ca&gt;L..D LIQ-HT
OF~ WIN~Y MOON ...

TWO HOL.lR5 LA"Tt:=R1 I WAS BORN.u
HOW 00 YOU LIKE
.
MY AUi0610c.lAAPHY 50 t=AR':!

AWAY ·~tHEc:f~~
.
'

BOY, THATB

UH-HUH.. "THSRe'a

~SA.LLY

ONI-YONE . .

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WI1H IT.

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'

r WAo 'ea&lt;.N IN AW~6T:
?

1 Section, 10 Pages
IS Cenls
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, April6, 1981

Haig claims Soviets
behind blood· battle

HAD 1't:1 .
SHOVIEL' DE-EP DRIF 1'5 c#!5NON

u, ••• AND MY FA11-\ER

entinel

~

PREMIER AND .SECRETARY , OF STATE - Israel's Prime
MIDilter Meoacbem Beglo (foregrolllld 1 and U. S. Seerelary of State
AleUDder Halg during the news conference they gave at the yc~. of their
lalkB IDJerusalem. (AP Wlrepbolo)
.

JERUSAlEM (AP) - Secretary
of State Alexander M. Haig Jr.
claimed today that the current
bloody fighting Lebanon may be in.
dlrecUy inspired by the Soviet
Union, in part beca1111e of llaig's tour
of U.S. allies in the Middle East.
"You cannot diScount my presence !)ere," llaig told reporters after a
meeting with Israeli President Yif..
zhak Navon. "You CBIUiot discount a
number of converging factors which
could contribute to what is a very
unacceptable turn of events in
Lebanon." .
The fighting' in Lebanon, between
Syrian troops on one side and
rightist Christian and Lebanese ar·
my forces on the ether, has
dominated Haig's talks with Israeli
officials.
Asked whether the Soviet Union
might be inspiring Syrilins shooting
in Lebanon to divert attention from
the Soviet threat to Poland, Haig
said that could be part of the answer
(Continued on page 10 I

1'\. ~· \. L \."'\. )..., , 1

"

,_ "l I I ' I I I ' · ' ' ' ' \ ' ' I

HAIG'S ARRIVAL STATEMENT- Secrelary of
Slate Alexander M. Haig Jr. arriving In Israel Sunday
from Egypt, said the purpose of his Mideast trip WJIS to

counter a Soviet lbreaf 1o lbe region. IsraeU Foreign
Mlni&lt;ter Yitzhak Shamir (at Haig's rightl greeting
Halg at Tel-Aviv airport. lAP Cablephotol

.President's. hospital stay lengthens

.LD

Ed·Sullivan

Priscilla's Pop
CAN'T BELIEV5

WINTER IS

Mother, son die in blaze

f=INAU..Y OVER 1

LAKEVIEW, Mich. - A 37-year-old woman, her 3-year-old son and a .
:IS-year-old man were kiUed Sunday in a fire that swept through a rw-al '
Mecosta CoWJty home Wider construction, sheriff's deputies reported.
· Betty Jo Chiles, her son Robert Chiles Jr. and Dennis Roebuck died
in the £ire which began around 9 a.m. in the wood frame home, ac·
cording to Deputy Lawrence Cox of the Mecosta County Sheriff's
Department.

I .

Blaze brought under control
EAST TENNESSEE- Firefighters brought the largest forest fire to
hit Arkansas in a decade under control SWlday as a steady rain helped
lit battling an arson-caused blaze that claimed 2,500 acres on Tennessee's Greene Mountain.
The northern Arkansas fire charred 12,000 acres before it was controUed SWlday, said Jim Grant, a spokesman for the state Forestry
Commission.
The blaze had threatened a Forestry Commission watchtower at one
time, but crews were able to prevent the blaze from reaching the
structw-e, Grant said.

M/&gt;.N 9-.Y, AS HE. STEP'S I
HIS ONN 6ACKYARP

AF.TER THE. ()oJ5t.AUGHT
OJ: A RAGING WINTER?

Boy allegedly kills two people
CLEVELAND - Homicide detectives are investigating an incident
in )l'hich a Cleveland boy, 13, is alleged to have fatally shot his mother
and her boyfriend after they ordered him to kill his father .
1!lain by gunshoU; Sunday morning were Catherine Vajusi and Peter
Sadac, both 40 and residenb; of the city's east side.
The boy's father, Abraham Vajusi, told the Cleveland Plain Dealer
the boy was ordered by the couple to kill him I the father I or face death
himself, and tile death of a brother and sister, and began shooting af·
ter Sadac sprayed him with mace.

This morning, Robin Gray, a
member of the White House press of·
lice staff, said the president arose
before 7 a.m. and that " he slept
well,".
A White House medical bulletin
said X-rays taken Sunday of Reagan
"show persistent lWJg infiltrates
along the bullet track, findings
which would be expected to resolve
quite slowly."
0' Leary said the particles were
probably dried blood or damaged
tissue r.eliited to nonnal scarring
and debris from the gunshot wound
in Reagan's left lung and 1¥ subsequent sw-gery.
"We don't believe this is out of the
ordinary," O'Leary said, but he ad·
ded, "We'd rather it was clearing. "
O'Leary said there was no indication of bacteria, iuter samples

of the president's blood, urine and
sputwn were examined by an iJt..
fectious disease specialist, and also
there was no sign of pneumonia or
bleeding In the lungs.
The White House said presidential
press secretary James S. Brady ,
who was shot through the brain in
the assassination attempt that also
woWJded two law officers, continued
to show improvement after being
removed from the critical list
Friday. Brady's speech is becoming
more sophisticated and he clearly
recognizes his wile, Sarah, by sound
and vision, the medical bulletin said.

He was said to have corrunented
Saturday night that "lbe Bear (his
nickname) was certajoly in the
wrong place that time."

Czt:ch leader blames turmo'il on West
PRAGUE, Czechoslovakia (AP) Congress, was underscored by in Poland."
dependent labor movement in
- With Soviet President Leonid I. Brezhnev's presence and by reports
"Events indicate that the crisis Poland last summer and iU; subBrezhnev at
his side , that Warsaw Pact nations had development in Poland is con· sequent legalization , the
Czechoslovakia's President Gustav beefed up their forces maneuvering · tinuing," he said. "We are not hiding Czechoslovak CornmwliSt Party has
Husak today equated Poland's labor inandaroWJd Poland.
the fact that ow- people are foUowing been among ib; harshest critics and
revolt with the uprisings put down
the events in fraternal Poland with among the most persistent in inby Soviet troops in Hungary in 1956
President Reagan , meanwhile, disquiet."
timating that it should be put down
andhisownnation12years'later.
was said to have sent his Soviet . Husak said "it would in our view
Husak accll8ed the West of inciting counterpart another warning again· be useful to review (these events)
U.S. Defense Secretary Caspar W.
rebellion in Poland and called for a • st military intervention.
jointly," but he proposed no time or Weinberger told reporters in London
meeting of communist nations to
The West has tried to "pull one or place for the meeting.
Brezhnev's visit to Prague "shows
" review" the challenge.
the other country out of the Socialist
Brezhnev flew to Prague Sunday the seriousness of the situation" in
The significance of his remarks, in family," S{!ld Husak, citing his own and was expected to address the par· Poland, but it was good that the
a report to the opening session of the nation and HWlgary as examples, ty congress later.
.Soviet Union was consulting with
16thCzechoslovakCorrununistParty and " is now once again (doing this)
Since the explosive birth of the in· other Warsa wPact nations.

No progress made to ·open coal negotiations

Man dies in altercation
MUNFORDVIll.E, Ky . - A Hart County man was killed in an alter·
cation about three miles north of Cub RWl on SWJday mon!ing, ac·
cording ~o Kentucky State Police.
.
Police said Gilbert Webb, 43, of Route 2, Munfordville, was cbllrged
in connection with the murder of Ben Thomas Butler, 46, of Route 2,
Cub Run.
Webb Is being held in the Hart County Jail without bond. He will be
arraigned on Monday.
. The victim was taken 'to the Hardln Memorial Hospital in
Elizabethtown for anautospy, police said.

Publishers predict long strike
CADIZ, Ohio - Two southeastern Ohio publishers agree that along
walkout could spell disaster for the United Mine Workers 'of America
and for mining communities throughout Appalac.llia.
,
"stores will move out. Our bt~~~iness ill already down," said Milton
M. Ronsheim, co-publi8her of the Harrison News Herald in Cadi2.
George Contos, who publishes Coal-Energy News at St. Clairsville in
neighboring Belmont County, said he thinks the UMW is in deep
trouble. .
.
•
Contos said, however, that the fault doesn't rest with the lulion +
"it's a minority of dissidents who have taken control. Aradical few."

...

WASHINGTON (AP)- President predict where .we're going to be."
Reagan, his damaged left lung
White House aides, however, said
clearing slowly of particles that doc- they expected the 70-year-old
tors say are responsible for his flue· president would be far enough along
tuating temperature, may h8ve to the road to recovery from the
stay in the hospital at least untU the assassination attempt a week ago
end of the week, aides say.
today to return home by the end of
Reagan, who conferred for 10 the week. That confonns to a
minutes Sunday with Vice President timetable originally mentioned by
George Bush about the Polish crisis senior White House officials last
and other foreign policy matters, Wednesday, although they later said
has no specific medical program for Reagan might be released early this
'
the rest of the week. Doctors are week.
deciding what to do day by day.
Over the weekend, Reagan ran a
Dr. Dennis O'Leary, spokesman fever that reached what was
for George Washington University described as a "moderate" level
Hospital, said Reagan "may be here between 101 and 103 degrees
for several more dliys, .but I'm just Fahrenheit. The nonnal body temspeculating."
perature . is 98.6 degrees, and
"We are working on a day·by-day periodic checks were perfonned to
basis of assessing his course." make sw-e no infection had set in.
O'Leary said. "I don't see now to None had, doctors said.

Brown said he did not plan~o
By Asaoctated Preas
No progress has been made to initiate a reswnption in the talks.
Church has made no comment sin· reswne contract talks aimed at ence
the 160,000-member union turned
ding the United Mine Workers'
nationwide coal strike, negotiators down the tantative agreement
for the union and coal operators say reached with the Bitwninous Coal
as the walkout enters its second Operators Association.
week.
•
,But Fred Decker, a senior UMW
B.R. "Bobby" Brown, chief official in West Virginia, said.efforts
negptlator for the coal operators, by the union to reopen talks had ·been
said Sunday night he still has not . rebuffed with warnings from the
spoken · directly .with UMW BOOA that It is sticking with the con·
President Sam ChW'Ch since the tract rejected .bY the miners . .
"Sam has been in touch with the
union's rank and We rejected Z.llal!t
· Tuesday a new three-!year contract. dperators to get them back to the
Brown said he was pe98imistic about
the prospects of negotiations
reswnlng soon.
" I have not heard from Mr. Chtll'ch. I don't anticipate a move back to
the contract talks," Brown said in a
telephone interview from Pit·
tsburgh.

lable, but they just say the same of.
fer wiU be on the !Jible. He 's still
trying to talk to them,' ' Decker said
this weekend.
Brown, however, said the BOOA
wouldn't necessarily insist on the
tenns Clf the defeated pact. He would
not elaborate.
The lack of reported progress,
giving credence to union and in·
dustry predictions of a• prolonged
strike, came as police investigated
what appeared to be the first death
attributable to the walkout.
In Virginia, authorities said a

UMW member charged with mw-·
dering a non-union coal miner had
been complaining about miners who
continued to work during the strike.
Roy Manness, 25 , of St. Charles,
Va., was shot to death Friday at a
Pennington Gap, Va., tavern, where
he had gone after work from his job
at the the T&amp;T Darby Coal Co., a
non-union mine nearby.
Manness was shot following an
argument with Raymond Lester, U,
a striking Westmoreland Coal Co.
miner said Charles Janeway, a Lee
'
.
CoWlty Sheriff's Department IJ}o
vestigator.

'

Honor picket line

OcctJpation first step
RAPID CITY, S.D. - Agroup of 351o 50 leaders and supporters of
the American Indian Movement have occupied a vaUey in the Black
Hllla u a first step in regaining the territory for the Lakota Sioux
nation, a spokesman for the group Aid Sunday.
MOlt of the people on the aile in the Black Hills National Forest in
, .ttn!Siem South Dakota said they expect to be evicted eventuaUy by
federal; stale or local officials.

Weather
Clear tonight. Lows in the mid to upper 3011. Partly cluildy Tuesday.

lflaha near 70. Chance of p~ipltation near zero percent tonight and 10
percent T~esday . Winds light and variable tonight.

·

~OllieForeeut- WedneadaythroulhFriday:Chanceof
~bowers Wlllladay and Thurlday. FlirFriday. ~llfthelll Wed-

lllldly llld·ln the IOI·'lbundiJ and Friday. Lon In the
llllday IIIII 'l'llurlday and in the 311.Friday.

«1J Wed-

Employes at Midwest Steel, East
Main St., Pomeroy, are honoring a
picket line at the P011111roy plant fOrmed by emjlloyea ol a similar plant
olthecompanyatNitro, W.Va.
According to a ~ for
Mlclwelt &amp;eel employes a the
Pomeroy plant lipled a new three
year conti'Kt 1ut week. Employ•
at Nitro, ltowevfr, failed to lien a
conlrlct. Einplo)'es from'Nitro have
set up a ' picket line at PomerOy

which employes at Mldnet Steel

are honoring.
·Employee of the Melp County

HiabWif Department IIIII sheriff
daJllllill nmain 111 llrike with no

lliW IIIIQIIItlonl ~ 8lrlkel

by badl 'IJ'OUPI 1~ ullidnay

Wedi\WIIY.

1.-

BEAum'ICATION - Memben ol P-..y Boy
a-&amp; Tnap M were baly Sallnlay wtt11 a

llileatfw,pnjed. '111ebiJiplt!de!I-1MIIdea
fnlita llle .... p;a! lie Ill II Kerr'a Ra
Plull were Jll"ld d IIJ tile 8 1•1ut ltelrd ol
. . . . . . . lipi
I ldlnrlll Salnlr*y'l wd 1 N
'

I

.._ tr-.

by llln* Clelud ud Bnace Teaford. Tl'oap -ben
WOitiDc were Brlu Gillbl, Jimmy Puar, Terry
Snntl1b, Jimmy Siyder, :;olllldy llwray,llai'IJ D " a,
Jell Haft, Haft, 1117 Trtal, _, ..,......
Dlle Lad anDL Tntp leUII'I• lnull hr 111e JIIWJed
lien! Ray Lll t anD~ .lualliJW ... FI'IIlCIIII.

�.

'

·"---

-· .

.

.

Monday, Aprll6, I'll

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Relief pitching key
tO Indians' success
..

Bitter than ever.a...:.·----'---~------,;____wd-=-}ia_m_~_.B_uc_k_ler_J_r.
.

~

unrecognizable.
,
such millsives, and go back to work.
"And God said to Jonah, Does!
Such a model might advise the
prudence of keeping an eye on thou well to be angry for the guard?
anyone judged too kooky to be ad- And he sai5J, I do well to be angry,
·
mitted to membership in the even unto death,
"Then saith tbe Lord, Thou hast
American Nazi Party, but since exclusion from such an elite would had pity on the gourd, for the which
• many of us, thou has not laboured, neither
make kooks of a goO&lt;!
how would the model provide enough madest it grow; which came up in a
guards?
·
night, and perished in~ night."
John Hinckley, like the killer of
The model might more easily
make a case for ti~hter security by Allard Lowenstein, is for all intents
the Secret Service when the and purposes as inexplicable as
president wanders about town, but cMount St. Helens, and probably as
are we enjoined to be angry at a uncontrollable. It isn't anger that we
group of men, one of whorri threw summon but, paradoxically, the
himself into the line of fire to protect kind ol joy that comes distinctively
Maureen' s father , and our from the submillsion the Lord urged
on Jonah, who was angry that the
president ?
•
By the lime the engineer of the Lord did not destroy Nineveh notmodel that would entitle us to' anger withstanding that Jonah had
finished his labors, he'd be too promised that He would. The joy we
exhausted to ~xpress any emotion at feel is, at 'the illunediate level,
alL And our society would be caused by Ronald Reagan's survival
- leavened only by an awful sadness
over the evolving plight of James
Brady. The deeper joy comes from
the behavior of Ronald Reagan under stress.
Professor Jeffrey Hart has written
Ill C11Utl Strt• t•l
l'umt· rtl)'. Uhin
a
brilliant editorial in which he
614 ·1J92·2 1Sti
remarks
that that behavior has had
OE HITF. D TO THF. 1\'TEREST OF Tfl f: M I-: 1(;,'\. ~L\ S ON AKEA
the effect of exorcising the miasma
of American Evil as Principal Cause
~lb
of violence. That there is evil isn't to
~m~ f""f""\,_,J.._-r.~d~~
be doubted, let alone that there is
~v
willfulness
and, arguably, criminal
ROBERT L. WINGETT
indifference in our courtrooms and
l'u bli sht•t
prosecutors' offices.
But the charges against America
PAT WHITEHEAD
BOB HOEFLICH
AssislJ!nl Publ i~ h t'rfCu n trullt'r
have been comprehensive, not par·
( ;,·rwral Munagt&gt;r
ticular. When Robert Kennedy was
killed Arthur Schlesinger conDALE ROTHGEB, JR .

. Maureen Reagan, on the afternoon
i~ happened, asked us all to be
·~~ngry. But angry at what' A neat
·geometric model· could be constructed .of a society in which a
young man detected carrying three
.pistols at an airport in Nashville
,should have been, somehow,
neutralized, though exactly how is
not self-ilvident.
. The same model might inform us
,that when a semi-anonymous young
man writes a letter to a young movie
star freshly matriculated at Yale
University, describing his determination to assassinate the
president if that girl declines to
require her suitor's passion, such a
'Communication should have passed
instantly into the hands of the FBI ;
'out there are girls who get letters
'from suitors who say they will blow
)ip City Hall if they do not receive a
valentine, and it is usual to smile at

sillgned au of America to perdition,
all bllt invoking on it the curse Plat
Joriah sought for Nineveh. Edward
Kennedy accosted the news of the attempted assassination with an im·
promptusermonon the·sametheme.
It has been ricocheting down ihe
echo chambers of self-abuse since
the assassination of John F. Kennedy. What Reagan did, WI professor
Hart perceives it, was instantly to
invoke perspective.

All ,the enduring values ~
struck us, rather than those that sink

TUG'ION, Ariz. (AP) - The success of the 1981 Cleveland Indians,
says team President Gahe Paul,
hinges entirely on one aspect of the
game: relief pitching.
"The ultimate finillh of this team
depends .on how well our relief pitching does," Paul said. "That's the
key, and it's a great big key."
The American League team has
' been struggling all spring to shore
up its bullpen, last season one of the
most inconsistent in basebalL By
contrast, the club's starting rotation
has been set since Day 1 of spring
training.
"With the starting pitchers we
have, we can show a good pitcher
every day," Paul said.
The Indians' starting rotation of
Len Sarker, Rick Waits, John Denny,' Bert Blyleven and Wayne
Garland, if all remain healthy, could
indeed beone of the better stalls in
·the league. Paul has been par·
ticularly encouraged by the spring

brilliant way of conveying an liP'
preciaUon of the tnnlceDdeDt W!ltY
the spirit when advei'Bity ~- . of a disparate people who, In an ·
"Who's minding the shop?" - t:e., emergency; COllie together, rather,
the shop had to be minded - ~ety than expo8e themselves, .lik!l Jonah,
has not eoine to an end. "I'~ ruined to deby~~r&amp;Uon and death.
my best sui~" - i.e., IOO!Sured on
. The doctc!" at the bolpital aid,
the scales of the Old Testament, an "Today we are all Republican~."
attempted 118888111naUon ill barely Few Democrats would ))egrud&amp;e the
noticeable. And " If I got this much ststement, or the generality thamadetthe
attention ·.in Hollywood, I'd never heroiaJn of Ronald Reagan'
have left!" - an arlilltically better men of all Americana.

CRISIS MOVE If 1:
CtAP AL HAIG IN 1/?:NS

IM#IPIAfft Y,

I

i\

MEMB ER

,,f Tht! Assuria tt•d Prt'ss, Inland

U ~tih Pr n~ A ~s twiation

'-l. f:TTER.Iii OF OPINION llrt' 14tlt'nmt'd. Thl'}

lt'ltt·rs IIH subjo:r t tn t'd it inl( and
h• tt t' r ~ \I ill
i !'I!'IUI'!'I, IIIII pt't!'l llllllll ti t • ~

num bt-r . Nu uns il(llt'd

mu~t

.~ huuld 1w Irs~ than 300 "utd~ ltmlo(. All

hr si.,; nt•d

ht· [l\J hlb ht'd .

a nd tht

·
~o~ilh

l.t'l t t·r~

na mt·. H dctrl' "~ and \l'lrtlhun"
~ huultl ht· in ..:u.Kt l.aS\t•, addtt·~~ in)!

:.Attention drawn
to
I
'
:morning dove hill
Ohio lawmakers are grumbling about attention being drawn by amour. ning dove hunting bill as they grope with school, mental health, prison
. and other major problems.
"The state is falling through the earth to China, and all we hear about
· around here is the dove bill," said Rep. Benny Bonanno, 0-Cleveland, in a·
typical, if slightly tongue-in-cheek, comment.
.
Representatives have been flooded with mail and telephone calls about
the bill, already approved by the Senate, under which the diyision of
wildlife could set an open season on doves each fall.
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr., 0-New Boston, who is trying to
bring the important swte budget bill to a floor vote Wednesday, said
Thursday that he's deluged with mail and telephone calls.
"We've got the state budget bill and all these other important matters
to think about," he said, "but most of my mail and phone ca lls are about
that bill."
'
The same is true for Rep. Mryl H. Shoemaker, !).Bourneville, chairman of the House Finance Committee which is considering the budget.
Shoemaker said last week that he's "getting 10 times as much mail on
that lousy dove bill than I am on anything else."
Riffe conceded the legislation is important to both hunters and environmentalists. But he said he could not explain why it should be a
higher priority than education and other viwl services a vastly underfunded budget will try toprovide.
Rep. James R. Ross, R·Coshocton, voted against the bill when it came
out of a HouSe committee this week, pointing to the nearly 1180,000 it a~
propriates for a study of "the mourning dove and its habitat."
Most of the mail apparently comes from hunters and other sportsmens'
groupa which have been pushing for an open s~ason on doves for the past
several years.
But the Humane Society and other groups, including environmentalists, have increased their efforts in recent weeks to block the
bill, Some of the mail has been orchestrated and is unsigned.
Rep. Ronald H. James, !).Proctorville, and other lawmakers from
rural areas of the state, especially southern Ohio, said their letters are
heavily in favor of dove hunting. He is the bill's House sponsor.
Rep. Walter D. McClaskey, 0-Marion, said much mail he's gotten in
favor of the measure was unsigned. Most letters that he knew came from
hill district, he said, were against the bill. He voted against it in com&gt;nittee,
.
Rep, Eugene Branstool, [).Utica, an opponent of dove hunting, said his
letters were l:l-1 against it. Apoll by a newspaper in his area show~ 22-1
against, he said.
Rep. Robert J. Boggs, [).Jefferson, .also complained about too much at·
tention on the dove bill. He said he's had trouble getting the attention of
hill constituents on more important issues.
"We have to find better ways to fund education, to get more money for
the universities, and for mental health, but how do we get their ear?" he
asked.

0~

~~Pf{.l.r6 -

IN~~Y

~~~ '.

NEW YORK (AP) - The real
esta te broker told the young couple
he would find them the right house.
"Consider me your scout," he said.
"I'll find you the best house for the
least money."
The couple was reassured, and on
the way home they mused about
their good fortune. They had a man
working just for them. With prices
so high, it was nice to think they had
professional help on thei~ side.
So did the family seiling the house.
They carefully chose the broker

Hop~

exacUy who would win and who
would lose.
In terms of sheer dollar 'Volume,
the potential decrease in Uie federal
bite is much bigger than the potential increase in
state collections. During the fiscal year that ends Sept. 30, the
Reagan program would cut income
taxes by $6.4 billion and· business
taxes by $2.5 billion. But individual
categories of taxpayers - those
hard· hit by an increase in the sales
tax, for example - could find that
the smaller federal bill doesn't make
up for a bigger state bill.
The Tax Foundation said its survey showed the ~tales say they need
the added money to balance
operating budgets, provide more
funds for highway maint.-utnce and
help local govern ments with
programs of property tax relief.

because, they observed, with home
prlces all over the lot these days
they felt a go«l broker might win
them several thousand dollars more.
They had another reason: At
loday's prices, the 6 percent sales
commission comes to a lot of money.
"If we have to pay it," they
reasoned, "we're better off paying it
to the best broker."
How can both parties expect the
best deal? Critics are sometimes
confounded that regulators haven't
made greater efforts to clarify mat-

for Detroit..__
hom.

Chief thankful _ _--,--_ _ __

Today ill Monday, April6, the 96th day of 1981 . There are 2119 days left in
the year.
Today's hlghllght In hiatory:
OnApril8, 1917, the UnltedSiates declared war on Germany.
On !hill date :
•
In 11109, American nplorer Robert E. Peary reached the North Pole.

climb ~ack to top reliever fonn

~V~

WASIDNGTON - I am not as so rare, an American car ill the
pessinoilltlc about the American faShionable thing to own.
Just the other day at a party, Jefautomobile industry as most people.
The one thing that makes the U. S. frey Doranz drove up the driveway
consunoer buy something ill If the· In a strange-looking vehicle and
product is different from anything honked hill
hill neighbors have. Thill is par- · We all rushed out of the house to
look atlt.
'' ·
ticularly true of cars.
Americans consider their
"What ill it?" someoneaslted.
"It's called a Chevette," Jeffrey
automobiles status symbols;
something not only to drive, but to ssid proudly.
use to put down their friends and
Bob Elliott, who w.as the first one
· relatives.
·
on the block to own a Toyota, was
For a long time, the foreign car llvld with jealousy.
' has· been the ultimate ststua symbol
"Where was It made?" he aslted.
"In the United States," Jeffrey
for someone living in the United
States, At first, only ·a few people said. "It wu bull In Detroit. I ,have
drove them. But in recent years it !hill friend who llvet Ill Gl'OIIIe Point,
He said It's
has beCome impo99ible to impress and he tipped me
anyone with an Imported model, going to be the car of
"
devastating results of thill fire would
Mrs. Elliott, who
a· Merbecause everyone has one of hill
be hard to Imagine.
~Benz sports
to
I would also Uke to thank the memown.
But now the pendulum may be Bob, uno
bers of the Ladles Alllillary of .the
11
1 don't know,"
swinging back,~ becauae they are
Middleport Fire Department for
supplying the lle(eU8ry food and
,....------ft
refreshments.
/liE JrJSr _mil, KV 60T7A
It is reassuring to know the Fire
HMtfr Pill HIM {l(Jfltl ON
Departments d this area and the
actOE/) 7lfi ooe. QII/EI(citizens can work together to handle
""" """" lill5t.lWU JUST
'"''• ~.. i'1iEP PIJTTI/J6
!hill type of situation. - Jeff Darst,
ftTar'
Fire Chief, Middleport F. D.

Today in history; ..

Bair hopes rookie attitude helps

CUIII•I'I-o;..,r.'&amp;I0&gt;4 trwt
(&lt;"""I&lt;""&lt;

The foundation found that tax ~ raises in fuel levies also are pend(ng
decreases outweigh tax increases in . . in: Arkansas, California, COlorado,
oniy eight states : Arizona, Georgia, · Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Maryland,
Hawaii, Massachusetts, Montana, Minnesota, Missillslppi, Nevada,
New Mexico, New York and New Hampshire, North Carolina,
Ol&amp;lahoma. Even in those eight North Dakota, Pennsylvania, Ten·Btstel!, however, the picture is nessee, Utah and Willconsln. The
mixed. Some taxe~~ would go down; · survey did not mention a drlv,e by
others would go up. In Arizona, the Florida Gov. Bob Graham to Ingovernor has proposed a one-time, crease the gasoline tu when the
$2f&gt;-million rebate in personal in- Legislature opens this week.
come taxes. But a hike in the
The most frequent propoeal is one
gasoline tax is also under con- to change the tax from a fixed
sideration. A slmllar situation amount to a percentage of the retall
prevails in Georgia: there i_s a plan price. In Iowa, for example, the tax 1
for a three-year program of income would be set at 10 percent of the
tax relief, but a bill also was in- sates price of the fuel Involved. Iowa
traduced to increase the state tax on also is one of seven ststes cited by
gasoline immediately and regularly the Tax FoundaUon as considering
adjust itfor inflation in the future.
an increase in the stale sales tu.
Changes in taxes on gasoline and The others are: Idaho, Kansu,
other motor fuels appear the most Michigan, Missouri, Nevada arid
popular with lawmakers, accOrding West Virginia.
to the foundation survey. Possible

How can both parties expect the best deal? .

Letter to editor
I would like to extend my thanks to
the fire departments of Pomeroy,
. Syracuse, Mason, and New Haven,
the Division of Forestry and all the
civilian volunteers that offered their
assistance to ·the Middleport Fire
Department in fighting the brush
fire on April!.
Their dedicated and untiring efforts ,will not soon be forgotten by
this department and the citizens d
Middleport. Without their help the

LACY SAFE AT HOME- Lee Laty scores one of · Joe Nolan walls for, lbe tBte throw.'Lacy bad hlls in 4
llllbree I'WIII iD lbe Pllllburgh Pirates' 14-1 romp over
bats, ZRBI's, htoleo bases and 3ruus for the day.
the ClucluaaU Reds. Lacy covers up as Reds' catcher

Some states consider tax increases
By Assoeiated Press
Don't counJ on extra dollars in
your pocket l'lecause of tax cuts thill
year. Increases in state levies could
eat up any reduction approved by
Congress in the federal income tax.
A survey bt the Tal Foundation
Inc., a non-profit research group
based in Washington, D.C., shows
proposals that would boost taxes by
$3.8 billion are pending in state
legislatures.
The foundation surveyed the 49
states holding regular legislative
sessions this year. (Kentucky is the
exception.)
The Tax Foundation noted that tax
decrealies as well as increases are
pending. The decreases, however,
add up to only $BOO million.
It is impossible to balance
President Reagan's plan for a
federal tax cut and the proposals put
forth at the state level to determine

c· '
~.

~·

showing of Garland, who has,pitched
inconsistently since he had major
shoulder surgery !hi-ee years ago. ·
"He's got confidence, and he's pitching free and easy," Paul said.
Garland allowed one run in five innings of work againSt the Milwaukee
Brewers in his most recent outing on
Saturday.
The bullpen, though; has been a
different story. Left~hander Sid
Monge, one of the league's top
relievers in 1979, has pitched
erratically !hill spring, as he did last
summer. Veteran Ross Grimsley
has been ineffective' and is unlikely
to stick with the club. Several young
pitchers have displayed occasional
brilliance, but 9one has stood out.
The problem became so acute that
the Indians gave up one of their top
minor league prospects, infielder
Juan Bonilla, to obtain reliever Bob
Lacey from,the San Diego Padres.
"I didn't want to trade Bonilla,"
Paul said. "But the staff convinced

.·.-.....,
:r
.

..

me we shout~ make the deal."
If the relievers come' ,through,
Paul said, the Indians will be competitive in the American League
East, baseball's toughest divisiOI).
He is not, however, making any
specific predictions this year.
"Too many tl)ings can happen;"
Paul said. "Last year, we had a lot
of injuries. It sounds like an alibi,
but injuries are injuries."
In 1980, Paul predicted about 85
victories for an Indians' learn th8,t
finillhed with 79. This year's team
he said, is much inJproved.
·'
Among the surprises of the spring
have been the overall performance
of rookie third base prospect Von
Hayes and the hitting of outfield
prospect Larry Littleton, Paul said.
")t's great to have a kid like Hayes
show, first, ability, and second, iJ11·
provement," Paul said. "I think he
could learn to play another position
if he had to, but not because he can't
play third base."

JVothing wrong with Indians' bats

The Daily Sentinel

Amnit•ll n Nr ~o~~ ~ papt• r fl'bbli~ h tn AssuciiUi un.

The Daily Sentinel Pag..-:3

ters . Two explanations are
sometimesoffered:
.
The first is more a human than a
legal problem. Even If warned,
buyers will continue to a.ssunoe
brokers are working solely for them,
rather than, as lB usual, for the seller
who ill paying them.
,
Secondly, a good broker
sometimes can come close to serving the desires of both parties, The
point is arguable, but the
jiiStiflcation offered ls that his compromilles may save a sale from

falling through.

I

A somewhat simllar situation
exists in the stock market, where
many small investors view their
~r as a confidant and advlaer,
That relationship can and does exist,
of COill'!e, but It Isn't always so.
To begin with, the broker's income
depends on hill making sales to h1a
customers. He earns nothing f&lt;~"
giving advice. Sometimes, he is not
even in a position to offer
professional advice on specific
stocks.

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - It's been a
Three years ago, Bair burst into
long slide from the top for Doug the top bracket of National tague
Bair, who's hopipg that taking a relievers with seven victories and a
rookie's perspective will help him spectacular 1.98 earned run average
. in 70 games, His 28 saves placed
climb back up the hill.
."1 came down to spring training third in the major leagues.
and put my stste of mind in a rookie . Bair started \he 1979 seasog in
slalus," said the 31-year-oid right- similar fashion, collecting four early
hander. "Rooltie pitchers come saves and a :win. 1
Then, . suddenly, the magic was
down here ln shape and ready to pitgone.
The Defiance, Ohio, native
ch. That's whatl did."

Eastern clobbers Wildcats
By Scott Wolfe
:
Eastern's Eagles pounded Hannan
Trace's Wildcats, 21),3, Saturday
morning in an SV AC high school
baseball contest. Eastern is now :l-1
overall and H in · the SVAC as ill
Hannan Trace.
'Eastern again untracked jts offense by sending 49 men to the plate,
12 of which reached safely on hits .
and 10 on free passes.
·
Chrill Allen, a hard-throwing
southpaw, had both a goOd day on
the mowid and at the plate. Of- ·
fensively, Allen collected two singles
and a triple to lead Eastern's attack.
Mike Bissell added a single and
double, while John Beaver, Rogie
Gaul, Greg Wigal, Rob Smith, Gary
Griggs, Nick Leonard, and Lee
Gainer all contributed with singles.
Allen got the starting assignment
for Coach Ralph Wigal's Eagles and
responded with six smooth innings of
work. He struck out six and walked
four before getting relief from senior
Greg Wigal. Wigal also had a good

outing by fanning one and allowing
no walks.
Mike Waugh started for Hannan
Trace, then was relieved by Kelly
Petrie in the fifth . Toby Sheets also
came on in the fifth to finish the
game on the inound. Waugh suffered
the loss while Allen gained his
5e1:0nd win of the year.
·
D. Bays had a single and.T. Halley
two singles, accounting lor the Wildcats' only hits.

became erratic and ended the
season with 16 saves, 11 victories
and a bloated 4.31 ERA.
Last year followed a similarly
disappointing pattern, as Bair
finished with a ~ record, just six
saves and a 4.24 ERA, He lost the
role of bullpen ace to Tom Hunoe.
That's the reason fot Bair's offseason fitness program and rookie
attitude this spril\g.
"The reason for aU that was to
have my legs and lungs in shape,"
Bair said. "I didn't have to worry
about soreness or flllllllng out of
breath.''

So far, Bair has a 2.08 ERA and
only one poor.game this spring. He's
pitched 122-3 innings without tiring.
11
Every day's an improvement,"
Bair said. "My only concern was
~ettin~ confidence in all my pitches.

By Associated Press
cinnati Reds.
Pitching was a problem for the
Andre Dawson 's three-run homer
Cleveland Indians last season and it triggered the Montreal Expos to a 7stiil may be a question mark for 0decision over the Minnesota Twins.
1981.
Randy Bass' bases-loaded double in
But ~re's nothing wrong with · the slxth inning ralliea the San Diego
their hitting, judging by their spring Padte!! to a 3-1 victory over the Seal·
training performance.
tle Mariners.
One of the hottest hitting clubs this
Mario Mendoza singled in one run
spring, the Indians raised their team and doubled home another as the
average to .340 with 18 hits Sunday Texas Rangers beat the Kansas City
that helped them beat the Chicago Royals :l-2. Rich Dauer singled home
Cubss-5,
a run in the lOth as the Baltimore
Among the surprises of the spring
have been the overall performance
of rookie third base prospect Von
Hayes and the hitting of outfield
prospect Larry Littleton, said
President Gabe PaUl.
BRADENTON, Fla. (AP) - Jason
"It's great to have kid like Hayes Thompson, in his first game as a
show, first, ability, and second, im- Pirate, collected three hits, inprovement," Paul said. "I think he cluding a two-run homer, as Pitcould learn to play another position tsburgh routed the Cincinnati Reds
if he had to, but not because he can't 14-1 Sunday in exhibition baseball.
play third hase."
Thompson, whom the Pirates unLittleton, for one, lashed a two-run successfully tried to trade to the
homer and two other hits to raise hill New York Yankees last week in a
spring average to .489. Littleton, deal blocked by National League
who also made a diving catch, has Commissioner Bowie Kuhn, was one
made the team as a backup center of three Pirates who smacked tworun homers.
fielder to Rick Manning.
Don Robinson, 1-1, was the winner,
Elsewhere , Jason Thompson
'
slugged three hits, including a two- Frank Pastore, 1-1, the loser.
The Reds, now 11-13 in pre-season,
run homer, to power the Pittsburgh
Pirates to a 14-1 rout of the Cin- went ahead 1.0 in the second inning.

Orioles edged
Phillies 4-3.

the Philadelphia :

Tommy John, Doug Bird and John
Pacella combined oil a seven-hitter
and Bobby Murcer keyed two threerun innings with singles as the New
York Yankees beat the St. Louis
Cardinals 6-0. Lance Parrish socked
a three-run homer and Detroit sent
12 men to the plate in a seven-run fif- ·
th inning en route to a 12-2 romp over ·
the Boston Red Sox.

Thompson helps bomb Reds

a

Dan Driessen walked, adva nceo to ·
third on Johnny Bench's double and :
scored on a ground out by Ray :
Knight.
But Pittsburgh, now 1:!-11, got two
runs in the bottom of the inning Qn
Thompaon's single ·and a home run
by Bill Robinson.
The Pirates added two more runs
in the third, another pair in the sixth
and one in the seventh before eru~
ling for seven runs off Reds reliever.
Jeff Lahti in eighth inning.
Two-run homers by Thompaon and
Kurt Bevacqua keyed the Pittsburgh
outburst. :
·

(••

Although offense let the pressure
of the Eagle attack by taking a 7-1
lead over the first two innings,
Eastern's defense also looked good.
Coach Wigal commented that the
team's pitching and defense is starting td come around.
Linescore:
H. Trace
100 020 0- 3 3 7
Eastern
340. 0211 x- 211 12 6
Batteries: Allen (WP), Wigal 6th,
and Gary Griggs. 'S.O. 7, BB 4,
Waugh (12 ), Petrie 5th, Sheets 6th,
aJl&lt;!.Beaver S.O. 4, BB 10.

__.~......(----Art'-'-B_uc_ia_a----:ld
heard they were toying with the Idea pany has a new. car called the
of making cars In Detroit, but I Escort. U we move now, I'll be the
didn't realize they had gone into first one on the block to own one.''
production."
. My wife uked me, "Wbat do we
Burberry, who owned a Volvo and dowithourMIIdl?"
a VolUwagen, opened the door d
"Weselllt,beforeDoranlllllbia
fool of US. I SIW 1111 televlliCII tbe
the Chevette and looked Inside.
"WouldyouUkemetotateyoufor , other night. that Cbrysler II JIUIIIII '
a spin in it?" Jeffrey ukeil. "It's. out a Dodge C!lll ru mUe
amazing what American engineers enquiries. But mwn'a tile word. We
haveputinallltleearthiulle.''
don't want ~ In the llliibJeffny and Burberry toot off, borilood to get wiDd ollt."
while the rat of 111 stood around
Doranz came beck with Burberr7.
depressed and sick that Doranz bad "Anyone elle ~a ride?" he llld
put one ~ron us.
pompoualy.
. •
1
The wives welt! particularly
We all declined, lbou&amp;b the
furious. One aald to her bulband, "I curiosity of drivinl around Ill an
tJioughl you told me the BMW ·was American-built car Wll 1dlllnc us.
thenewilatuscarinthecountry."
MOll of 111 left the party SI,IOOIIU
"It wu, for a year. How did I we could beci!IM we COIIJI!n'tliiiDd
know Amerlcalla would llart the IIIIIUIIlook on Doranl' faee.
making automobiles again?"
W\10 would bave drelmld lbat In
"I'm 1Dinl to tql Doranl," EU!ott IAIChuhort timelbellril olOIIIIInc
said. "I hear the Ford Mcar Com- aforetgn.madecarwouldbepe?

\

We're'vour hometown power companv.
But we·re also part of American Electric Power,
. one of the most efficient electric systems in
the countrv.
wnen you tum on alight switch, or an
electric appliance. you probably don;t care
where th!! electric ltv comes f1'om. As long as It
getstnere.
But we care, because the cost of making
etectrtcltv can varv from plant to plant at

DOONESBURY

[

i~ l·

different times of the day. Ana, since we·re
part of the 7-state AEP svstem, we can tap the
best combinatiOn of generation and transmls·
slon efflclencv to get the most economical
power to you Instantly from an'{Where in the
system . ·
Being part of this power svstem and Its
split-second efficiency Is one reason why we've
been able to keep vour electric rates below the
national average ,•
•source: U .l. Statis tical Yearl:lool&lt; No. l17 Novemoer, 1980

'

..J

Vleglveltourbest

OHIO POWER COMPANY

'

.'

.'

�Pomeroy~Middleport, Ohio ~

Morlclay, Aprll6, 1911

•

.

By A11oclaled Pftu
The jinx J'I!III!Iins, and last Yi!ar's
hero lias l;lecome this year's gOat: ·
For the 12th straight ·a,ason, the
National Basketball Association's
defending champion has been
unable to ielain its crown., The Los
Angeles Lakers, who won the title In
a six-game series with Philadelphia
last May, were knocked off by the
Hou8ton Rockets~ Sunday in the
, rubber game of their best-d·three
]&gt;layoff miniseries.
"Tile game was a street fight,"
said Rockets Coach Del Harris. "As
far as our franchise was concerned,
it should be written in gold ali the
most innportant victory. This iB my
biggest win in 22 years of coaching,"
Ironically, it \vas Earvin "Magic"
J ohn!lon, the most valuable player of
the 1980 championship series, wbo
wore . the goat's horns alter the
Lakers' los,s.
• Johnson scored just 10 points and
missed 12 of his a ·shots, including
!~footer with five seconds left that
would have given the Lakers the
lead.
"! can't S.y this or that caused us
to lose," .Johnson said. "I was hit on ·
the elbow on that last sbot and held
back instead of following through. I
was so sure I was fouled ."
No foul was called, and so the
Lakers have gone the way of every
NBA champion since the 1968-69
Boston Celtics, the last repeaters.
"My feeling is not so much
frustration, but 'what happened?'"
Lakers forward Jim Chones said. "It
was a horrible game and a horrible
day. " .
The Rockets surprised the Lakers
by taking the series opener 111-107 at
Los Angeles Wednesday night, but
the Lakers kept their hopes alive by
winning at Houston 111-106 Friday
night. Those hopes were dashed Sunday in Los Angeles, and it will be ihe
Rockets, who were only 40-42 during
the regular season and did not clinch
a playoff berth until the final
weekend of the campaign, who will
advance to the best-of-seven
Western Conference semifinals
against San Antonio beginning
Tuesday.
Meanwhile, the Kansas City Kings
advanced to the other Western Conterence semifinal against Phoenix
by defeating the Portland Trail
Blazers 104-9/i in the third game of
their miniseries at Portland. All six ·
Western Conference · miniseries

a'

NBA mililserles playoff as l~e Lakers' Jamaal Wilkes
looks on. The Rockets defeated I.AJS Angeles, 89-116, and
won the series two games to one. (AP Laserphoto).

-Rutland, Bradbury teams
win championship gam~s
In the Meigs Local Elementary
Basketball Tournament, Rutland·
Bartrum and Bradbury Cassell
emerged as champions in the fourthfifth grade and sixth grade divisions
of the tourney.
Rutland easily defeated Bradbury
Hood, 61-34, in the finals on a great
individual effort by Michael Bar·
trum, who poured in 39 points. Bartruro's 39 points was more than the
oppositioni's entire total.
In the sixth grade division Brad·
bury Cassell downed Salisbury-~3'38 .
Donnie Becker had another out·
standing game with 35 markers,
while teammate Jeff Hood added
six. For Salisbury Phil King netted
23 and Gerald Moore eight points.
In openmg round play Salisbury
Hunnell swept past Bradbury Baker,
23-15, in the fourth and fifth grade
tourney . Tim Jeffers had 12 and Ar·
tie Hunnell six for the winners, while
Matt Baker had seven" and Paul
Melton six for the losers. Bradbury
Hood downed Harrisonville No. 2, 3622led by Chris Becker's 12 and Scott
Hanning's 12. Jason Rupe had 12 and
Scott Williams seven. Rutland Bar·
trum nailed Harrisonville No. I 33-13
led by Michael Bartrum's 19 and
Joey Snyder's eight. For the losers
Wesley Howard and Jared Sheels
had five and four points respec-

lively.
Pomeroy Powell blasted Salisbury
Cullwns 39-13 on 25 points by Barry
McCoy and six by Todd Ackerman.
Don Dorst had six for Salisbury.
Pomeroy BarloA bombarded Bradbury Whitlatch 42·7' on 18 fy James
Norman and 10 by Tammy Wright.
Steve Cassell and Brett Little had
five and two points respectively.
Finally Pomeroy Wright defeated
$alem Center, 27-18, as Chris Smith
netted lJ and Keith Mattox, Terry
Fields six . B. Goodman and
McGuire had 12 and four respectively for S. C.
·
In the next round Bradbury Hood,
Rutland Bartrum, and Pomeroy
Barton, posted wins advancing to
the next round. Rutland Bartrum
·then adva nced to the championship
game against Bradbury Hood by
claiming a 37-25 win over Pomeroy.
Mike Bartrwn had 18 and Joey
Snyder seven for the winners.
James Norman and Eric Spencer
led the Pomeroy club. In the finals
Rutland Bartrum handily defeated
Bradbury Hood, 61·34. Bartrum had
39 and John Sisson 10, while Scott
Hanning had 13and Chris Becker t2.
In the opening round of the sixth
grade division, Salisbury defeated
Pomeroy Hysell34-24 on 27 points by
Phil King.

Gerald Moore added seven for the
winners while Mark Elliot and Todd
Hysell each had nine for ihe
Pomeroy team.
Bradbury Kitchen had a close call
over Harrisonville,
36-33
Eddie
Kitchen
swished 19 and
JeffasNelson,

si~arrisonville's
Jessie Howard had
11 and Monty Cline nine. Finally
Bradbury Cassell had an exciting 4f&gt;.
· 43 win over Rutland with Donnie
Becker netting 21 arid Jeff Hood 12.
Kent Eads had a great game with 31
and Maria Musser seven.
In the semi·finals Salisbury
downed Pomeroy 33-24. Gerald
Moore had 19, Phil King 12 and for
Pomeroy Brian Tannehill seven,
Rex Haggy six. Bradbury Cassell
downed Bradbury Kitchen ~!40.
Becker had 32, Tim Casselll3 for the
winners and Kitchen 24 for his team.
In the finals Donnie Becker led
Bradbury Cassell to a 43-38 win ove·r
Salisbury as he netted 35 of his own.
Jeff Hood added six. Phil King led
the tourney's runner-up with 23 and
Gerald Moore swished eight.
The Meigs tournament was sponsored by the Bradbury and Mid·
dieport PT As. First and second
place trophies were awarded'in each
division with individual trophies
going to the champions.

.

.

games were WO!l by the road team.
points in the early IIObJg, but ~ 23-7
In the Eastern Conference, the two surge put KanSas City In frGIIt 4t.48
aemiflnal series got underway Sun- at halftime. The ~. lltretcbed the
, day and both home teatlll! won. The lf!ld to 12 pointlln the fOUrth quar..
Boston Celtics deff!lted the Chicago ter, 8aw Portlalul pull within three.
BuiiB 121·109 and the Philadelphia with 1:34 left and then put Pille
76ers edged the Milwaukee Bucks away on bilskets by Sam Lacey 8nd
i:l.$-122.
King.
.
Moses Malone scored 23 poinls for
"Reggie King iB a big part of our
Houston, but .the hero was Mike game," said teammate OOa BlrDunlf!lvy, who tossed In an Ill-footer daong, wbo scored 22. '"He's always
with 15 seconds left for the winning 'rebounded well, but tOday he gave us
bilsket.
·
. a big lift with his scoring."
Johnson had been fouled with 30
seconds to play and the score tied~
Celtica 1%1, Balli I•
85, bill he made just one of three free
Larry Bird hit 13 of his 23 polnlil in
throw attempts. After Dunluvy put · a ~point Boston ~ ql!&amp;l'ler that
· the Rockets in front by one, Johnson enabled the Celties to pull away
brought the ball upcourt and tried a from Chicago. BOBton clOIIed out the.
!~footer tliat missed~ •
period with an 1&amp;-4 surge to take a 94Kareem Abdui.Jabbar topped Los . 8! advantage into the fourth quarter
Angeles with 32 points.
and was never in trouble after that.
Klagslot, Blazers 95
Reserve forward Kevin McHale
Forward Reggie King scored 20 of added 21 points and five blocked
his 28 points in the second half and sbots for the .Celtics, and Cedric
also grabbed 15 rebounds to ]f!ld Maxwell also scored 21. McHale had
Kansas City past Portland.
a pair of three-point plays in the
The Blazers led by as many as 15 decisive tliird-quarter burst.

Hayes.
The playoff was something of an
anticlinnax. For the record, Nelson
won it on the secOhd elrtra hole with
a 2-foot birdie putt. Hayes made par.
But the drama all came earlier. It
centered around the 18th hole at the
Forest Oaks Country Club course
which had been soaked by a chill/
day-long rain.
'
Nelson and Hayes had jockeyed ·
back and forth throughout the wet
windy day. Nelson led on thre~

RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. (API " I was feeling kind of weak and
Nancy Lopez· Melton was feeling a went to the doctor last Wednesday,"
little under the weather last Wed- she recalled. "!think it was·just a
nesday and even went to the doctor matter of slioitage of iron or
to seek some relief from her general somefhlng like that. I felt real good
fatigue. She's now feeling very, very for most of the tournament. "
well.'
The victory was· Lopez-Mellon's .
"I feel great," said a gleeful • first in the Dinah Shore which
Lopez-Mel19~ Sunday after ~praying began in 1972. She had ww; almost
a large portion of the media corp11 every title available on the Ladies
covering the C?lgate-Dinah Shore . Profesliional Golf Association tour,
tOurnament with champagne. "It's however with 21 previous triwnphs
been a greatday."
to her cr~lt.
Although It may not have been
·I
what the doctor prescribed, a vic'
tory in the richest tournament on the
"I was very excited abOut my ·
women's golf tour seemed to be just round," she said after establishing a
what Lopez-Mellon needed to perk tournament and Mission Hills Counher up. She fubloned an 8-under-par try Club course record. "Playing
84 SwJday to take 1 two-stroke vic- weU iB what made it so very exobry over Carolyn Hill in the szo,ooo clting. To win waa e~:cillng, too, and
I gtreM the money comes last. "
tournament.

\na.

SUPERMARKET

·whe,re Friendliness &amp; ·savings Go Hand in Ha'nd

CHICKENS OR
.

W..'~·"·~·~$.............~~.~~...

·

ICEBERG H~

Surprises

c

299

.

DIU VALUES
HOMEMADE

STORE SLICED
SUPERIOR
PER

$
189
SALAD PER LB. $229 DUTCH LOAF........~~: .....
SUPERIOR ·
PER $249
POTATO
SALAD PER LB. 79~ BO.ILED HAM....... ~~·.: .. .

CHICKEN

LB.

CAULIFLOWER •••••••••• !.~t~~·.. ~l

MciNTOSH or

,. ROME APPLES

F

OR

'

CALIFORNIA
Rm RIPE QUARTS

19

ER
I

LENTEN SPECIAL

CHEF'S
DELIGHT
CHEESE

3LB: 99~

$ 39

2·LB.

STRAWBERRIES

.

PLANTATION
BROWN OR POWDERED

SUGAR

•r

CA

$229

BOX

$
129
MIRACLE rWHIP.........~~~~····
KRAFT. ,.

,.

THRim SLICED BACON ..............~B:.69~

R

CUCUMBER.S................... 3 :R s1oo
GREE~ ONIONS ............... 4 StOO
CELERY. .... ~ ....... ~ ........~~~.~~~~. 49'

PER

.,

'
••

N

Where F ri endlin ess &amp; Savings Go Hand i n Hand •

nel

.

~

LETTUCE.....

FISH FIUETS

separate occasions. Hayes led on
three separate occasions. Three
times they were tied.
On the 18th tee, Hayes held 2stroke lead.
"I wouldn't have given you two
cents for my chances," Nelson said.

PER

FRESH CRISP

HEAT AND SERVE

SUPERMARKET

.

99*

BOLOGNA ......... w. ...

~~--------------PRODUCE------------------~

CAPliN FRESH

HAULING IT IN - TraU Blazers' Kermit Wllllimctoa pUlls I rebound away from Kausas City's Leon Qouglas durtDg tbelr NBA p~yoff
game S\mday In Portia ad. (AP Laserpbolo 1.

'PER

'

SUPERIOR RED CASING PER

. PERg

POLISH SAUSAG.E.~.~: ..

PER

-

·

'

c ar· a·\na\

iUSPSI-1
ADhilloaoiMttltlmedili, lDc.

SUPERIOR FRANKIES

FRYING ·

LENTEN SEAFOOD
SPECIAL

'

89 O

USDA GRADE A

·

8 AM TIL 10 PM
CORNER Of LOCUST
&amp; PEARL ST.
Mllllli.EPORT, 011.

~

- --SUPERIOR MIAT SPECIALS-----.

·

AM

KRAFf

SALE
DATES APRIL 6·11, 1981
.
.

OF VAlUES

,

CHICKEN BREASTS ••••••••••••• :~~••! 1
~·CHICKEN .THIGHS ........... ~ •••• ~B~. 89~
.
·
Pm ·
CHICKEN DRUMSTICKS .........~·••'l 09
CHICKEN WINGS ••••••••••••••••• ~B~. 59~

OPEN 7 IMYS

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

••

rr~i!!~~~~~~~~!!!!!!~~~~;;;;;;;;~r··--------.

Publl!hed every afternoon except Sunday,

Nancy Lopez Melton
wins Colgate event

' OPEN 7 DAYS
8 At.t TIL 10 PM
CORNER OF LOCUST .
. &amp; PEARL ST..
MIDDLEPORT, Ott,

2
'

Vaughan's

. OUR BIG

WE'RE CELEBRATING

MlXED FRYER PARTS••••••~~••••••

VAUGHAN'S CARDINAL
AGAIN JOINS THE AMERICAN
CANCER ·SOCIETY, SATURDAY,
Nelson's magic wins $54,000 event APRIL 11, 1981 TO HELP .
FIGHT CANCER, BY
a
s
DONATING ·5% OF THEIR
$5&lt;1,1100.
PROFITS TO THE MEIGS COUNTY.
The Duil y Sel)ti
AMERICAN CANCER· SOCIETY
GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) - A
stunned Mark Hayes sinnply couldn 't
believe it.
Neither could Larry Nelson, who
had just performed little golfing
magic in· which he turned two cents
into
"I guess 'impossible' is the only
word to use," Nelson said after his
playoff victory Sunday in the
Greater Greensboro Open.
"Stuff like that doesn't happen.
Not in real life," said the shaken

I

The Daily Senfillel- Page..:.s

.THIS WEEK .

Vaug an's

Rockets knock out Lakers

I

BACK·UP DEFENSE - Huustun Rockets' center
Billy Paultz puts his whole body lnto defending I.AJS
Angeles Lakers center Kareem Abdui·Jabhar during
second-quarter action Sunday in the final game of the

· Mo~day, April6, 1981

CA
.N

so

KRAFT

REGULAR WITH ONION

HICKORYO~HOT

BARBEQUE
TENDERLEAF
·TEA

cl

•

99
1
BAG$.............,.,.... .~.~: .. ~

REGUlAR or DIET

·E

ASST.

Ty

R£(MAR or DIET

7:~~i.

Member: The Auoclated Press, Inland Dally Pr!ss AMociation and the American

Newspaper PubiJ.shen~ AMoclaUon, N•Uollll
Ad ve rtfslng Repre1entallve, Landing
Aasoclatell, 3101 Eud lc:l Ave., Clevellnd,
Ohlo,l511!.

SAUCE ~ .......... ~.~ ..

LIQUID

CLOROX

NORTHERN
BATHROOM
TISSUE

FlAVOR~

YG0.5~,T~~-. $}

MondoylllrOUih Frldoy, Ill CowtStree~ by
the Ohio Valley Publlahlng Compony •
MWUmedia, Inc., Pomeroy, Oh.lo 457et,
Wz-2116. second class poslage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio.

1

lj OZ. 69~

99~

'139

JACK
FROST
.
PURECANE

. .

SUGAR ................ ~.................

5

']79
LB. BAG

POSTMASTER: Send address to The Dally ·
Sentinel, Ill Court St ., ~omeroy, Ohio451ti.

DAIR-Y VALUES

SUBSCRIPTION RATES

By Clnln orMIW Roolle
Onowm . .. .... .. ................ . 11.00
OneMonlll .. ................ .... ... IHO
One Year .. ....................... 111.10
SINGLE COPY
PRICES

M -IN'S FRESH

~-%

Dally ...... .. .................. IICtolo

Sublcriben not cltsirtng to pay the e•rrler
m1y remit In a dvance dlrtd to The billy
SenUnel 011 a 3, I or II 111011111 boola. Credit
will be slven curter uch month.
No aubocrlptl0111 by mall permilleolln ....,.
where home c1rrler ~ervlce ilav•U.bk!.

,

MA!L8UII8CIIIPrJON8
Olllo aodliHI VlfPola
3MOnth .... ... , ................ .. 110.141
Sla month .. .......... ............ 117.141
I Year .... ~~a;;~~
III.IIG

.PLAN TO
BE APART

M'iLK

.

' PLASTIC .
1 G1110N

...••........ ~ •.••.•.....••.•..

SINGLES .•.•.!~!.~~·.. ~1

.'

......

... lleoiViqlala
3Monlh ........................... III.IIG
lllonlh .............. \. :.... ..... . ...
IYoor .......................... . 111.10

$}59

OF OUR DAY!

. . I-ll PIG.
IE •..•••....•.••••••••••
••

BANQUET

BUFFET SUPPERS .........21.8.
ASST. VARIETIES

$1

49

GARDEN DELIGHT

89

·

FRENCH REGULAR or
FIIIIE!5 •••• :•••• ~~~~~~~··········
VELVn
11
0'M MIU'

5

$}49
BAG
LB.

Ul.

$}89

ICIE CIIIEAM ················~·······
&gt;,

•

�Page-6-The Daily Sent,Rel

Monday, Aprll6, 1911 · .

Mrs. Dorothy Kar:r ·,is
1981 amateur gardener ·
Mrs. Dorothy Karr wwi named the
1981 amateur gardener and Mrs.
Mace! Barton, the outstanding gar·
den club member at the Chester
Garden Club meeting held Wed·
nesday night at the home of Mrs.
Clarice Krautter.
Mrs. Karr and Mrs. Barton will .
·represent the club in the Region 11
contest for regional honors to be held
&lt;in July I.
New officers elected were Mrs.
Twila Buckley, president; Mrs.
Crystal Rayburn, vice president;
Mrs. Barbara Knight, second vice
president: Mrs. Mary Huffman,
secretary; Mrs. Mauritta Miller,
assistant secretary: Mrs. Rosemary
Young, treasurer; and Mrs. Clarice
Krautter, assistant treasurer.
The regional meeting was an·
nounced for May 16 at Hamden with
reservations to be sent to Mrs. Clyde
Cotte~ill at Hamden by May 9. Mrs.
Betty Dean will give an arranging
demonstration during the morning
session, with Paul Strauss, her·
balist, to speak at the afternoon
session.
The OAGC bulb sale are to be into
Mrs. · Paul Shoemaker, regional
public beautification cbainnan, by
June 16, it was noted.
. A tour of the greenhouse of Harry
and Juanita Lodwick was planned
along with a white elephant sale to
be held at the May meeting. Garden
seeds were given out by Mrs. Bar·
ton, regional horticulture chairman,
who advised that the seeds are
available to all clubs in the region.
For roll call members responded
with a favorite wildflower. Mrs. Bar·

Poster fare participants asked
All fourth grade students in Meigs
Judging results will be announced
County are invited to participate in a after the April22 Meigs SWCD board
conservation poster contest spon- tneeting and awards of silver dollars
sored by the Meigs Soil and Water and ribbons will be presented in the
Conservation District.
schools by supervisors Rex
Entries must be made on or before Shenefield, Tom Theiss, Roy Miller,
April 2() in the students' respective David Gloeckner, and Thereon John·
local schools and will be collected by son.
District personnel and judged by the
Two county champions will be
Ladies Auxiliary of the Meigs Soil selected from all the first place win·
and Water Conservation District.
ners to receive a trophy.

Garden
Club hears program
•
on using and pressing flowers
A program on pressing and using
pressed flowers in decorative ways
was given by Mrs. Phyllis Rice at
the recent meeting of the Rose Gar·
den Club pf Tuppers Plains held at
the home of Mrs. Dorothy Stout.
Mrs. Rice displayed several pictures she had made with pressed
flowers noting that it is an inex·
pensive hobby requiring only
imagination for striking and unusual
designs.
Members brought vases to be sent
to Veterans Memorial Hospital and
it was decided that the club will fur·
'

nish flower arrangements tor the
Eastern basketball banquet.
Mr&gt;. Ethel ·Arbaugh read scripture followed by prayer by Mrs. An·
naRice.
For roll call members responded
to "I'm not superstitiuous, but. ..."
and then gave the gardener's creed
in unison. Timely gardening tips
were given by Mrs. Hazel BarnhilL
Mrs. Doris Koenig read the verse of
the month. The traveling prize was
won by Mr&gt;. Mary Jane Goebel with
Mrs. Rice winning the door prize.
Cards were signed for several who
are ill and shutin.

Baptismal service held
at local church here ·
A baptismal service was held at
the Sonny McClure farm recently by
the First Southern Baptist Church of
Pomeroy. Baptized by the Rev.
William Newman were Pam Allen,
Karen Spencer, Joe Bowland, and
Polly Bowland.
During the Sunday school that
day, photographs were taken of the
68 persons attending and Sunday
they were distributed with each per·
son present receiving a class pic·
lure. The Rev . Mr. Newman and Bill
McClure were the photographers.
On Sunday eening members and
friends gathered at the Riverboat
Room for a potluck dinner.
Attending were the Rev. and Mrs.
Newman, Brenda, ·Lisa and Jen·
nifer, Donna, juJia, Karen Gerald
and Eric Spencer, Bob and Joyce
Mills, Sonny and Rhojean McClure,
• Janet Matthews, Sadie Carr, Lee
;:: · and Rachael Lefebre, Joe Bowland,
;· Polly Bowland, Ed, Sue, Joe, Mike
' and Tom King, Rena Lefebre, Lanny
Tyre, Donald and Norma McCune,
Mary Popko, and Mildred Archer.

·· OFS to meet Tuesday
Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of'the
Eastern Star, will meet at 7:45p.m.
Tuesday at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple. There will be election and
installation as well as initiatory
· · work. A practice will be held at 7:30
: . Monday evening at the temple.

Council to meet here
Rhonda Dailey, R. N. will address
the Human Resource Council
' · Tuesday at noon at the Meigs Ina on
, the Red Crol8 disaster relief ser·
• vice. Mrs. Dailey will ouUine the
· , plan of action for Meigs Colinty In
, the event of a disaster.

'RO'und Me~gs ·Lo~al ..
BCboo1 beck In 1986, That law uyi :
we will pay 4 m1111 for 23 ybaeackrs •I
and l!el1d to the State (to pay
.
have the' loU! the dlff,~ of wh8t ' '
· ·we uae locally ancl the four. inllls,
" but at no time will w.e send 1e8s ·
~--half mill. What baa happened this year II that ainliXIt all

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ohlinger

Marriage ·takes place
POMEROY - Connie Warner,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dale E.
Warner, Route I, Minersville, and
Charles Ohlinger, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Ohlinger, Route 1,
Letart, were married on Feb. 21 at 7
p.m. at the Forest Run United
Methodist Church.
The Rev. Stanley W. Merrifield

·Annual banquet-dance
of Middleport H S.
Alumni successf~l
The annual banquet and dance
of the Middleport High. School
Alumni Association will' be held
on Saturday, May 30, Mrs. Ann
Johnson, president, announced.
~ dinner will be served at
6:30 p.m. in the Middleport
Elementary sChool auditoriwn
by Evangeline Chapter, Order of
Eastern Star. The dance will be
held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. in the
Meigs Junior High auditorium
with "Boss Grueser."
Toastmaster wiU be William S.
Diles of the class of 1941. At the
banquet, the Susan G. Park
scholarship will be awarded to a
graduating senior. Students who
live in Middleport at the time of
their graduation and/or started
in the Middleport schools or

April I, 1981
There is a possibili ty that you

might do a considerable amount
of traveling this com ing year.
Your tr ips aren' t apt to be long
ones. but they should be loads of
fun.
"The harder you work the luckier
you get ." Th is is especiltlly true

tor you tOday, so roll up your
sleeves and get ott to an ear ly
start.

·

TAURUS (April 20·May 201

Your possibilities for personal
gain are very promising today,

but you must take care not to
become discouraged If you don't

grab the brass ring on the first

•

Master
Harmon turns
two years
James Eugene Harmon, son of
Dully and Sput Hannon, celebrated
his second birthday Sunday, April 5,
at his grandma Shirley Harmon's
home.
James' guests were his grandmother and grandfather Harmon,
his aunt, Judy McConnick, his wr
cle, Jim Harmon, Chri8 and Kelly
Harmon, Tony and Julie SyCI'WI,
Barbara and Andy Combs.
His birthday cake wu baked by
his grandmother, Shirley Harmon.

DAR to hear FBI agent
Mac EIU, special agent for the
FBI, will be guest speaker at the
Friday meeting of Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter of the Daughters of
the American Revolution. The 12:.30
luncheon meellng will be held at the
Meip Inn. Ellll will apeak un the
"Statua of the FBI Today."

whose parent or parents were a
graduate of Middleport High
School are eligible for the
scholarship.
Applications for the Susan G.
Park Scholarship may be oJ&gt;.
tained from Mrs. Mildred Bailey,
Route I, Middleport: Lois
McElhinny, 424 Fourth St., Mid·
dleport, or Nan Moore, 160 North
Fourth St., Middleport, and must
be retilrned to one of the com·
mittee members by April30.
Reunions wiD be held for the
classes of 1916, 1921, 1926, 1931,
!936, 1941, 1946, 1951, 1956, 1!161,
1!166, and 1971.
Reservations are to be made
with Mrs. Carolyn Grueser,
treasurer, at 1625 Lincoln ,
Heights, Pomeroy.

ASTROGRAPH

ARIES (March 21 ·April 19)
You've heard that old adage,

james Hannon

performed the private double-ring
ceremony. Attendants for the couple
~ere Kimberly Letchfield and Danlly Letchfield, New Haven.
. The couple now reside at Route 1',
Letart, W. Va.
The new Mrs. Ohlinger is employed by Central Operating Co. a~d
Mr. Ohlinger is at the Kyger Creek
Plant.

try.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20)
Don' t del iberately seek them, but
know in the back of your mind
that you're very good at dealing
with difficult situations today
should any arise.
CANCER (June 21·July 22)
Pleasant surprises could be in
store tor you today II you've
. recenlly gone out of your way to
be helpful. Others' reci procal et·
torts may not be fell at once.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 221 Business
· and pleasure should mix well
today. You' re gifted af' handling
the mundane, bul-yOlJ ·also know
how to make friends in the
process. ·
1/IRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Don't
discount any clever Ideas you get

today which you feel could ad·

vance your · status. or increase
your income. They should work,

so give them a try.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) Dif·
ficulties which could overwhelm
others aren 1 t apt to have the

same effect on you todoy.
Perhaps it's because you have
faith in yourself - ·and vou
should.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 221
Associations with the right types
could turn out ewtremely ·
profitable tor you today. Link
yourself with doers and winner.s,
and share the rewards.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec.
211 Subdue your Independent im·
pulses today and strive to work
more In harmony with others.
Greater progress can be made

collectively.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19)
There IS a possibilitY that you will
be luckier later In the day than
yOlJ are In the a.m. Roll ouffrom .
under any early mishaps or set·
backs .
.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 211-Fe,, 19)
Take advantage of opportunities
today to meet or mix with influential persons: You' re luckier
than usual In dealing ' with big
wheels.

the school bond il8ue we
· caused to be plit ·
on the baUot at the
June primary. In
a time Of double
digit Inflation, we
of the bonds.(Middlejlort ElemenIIIJl all faced with
tary, Pomeroy Elementary, etc.)
seriOWI financial
have been paid Off and we need
problems. ,Forllllly-sllghUy more than one mill
tWIBtely for the
lbciilly. Therefore, Instead ol senMeigs Local GLEASON ding the nlinlmuln of one-half
School District, the bond iaaue mill to the State we are sending ·
will •not raise lues for any tu- just under 3 mills.
·
·
·payer, landowner, or person in · Howdowekeepthe2lilmlllsin
Meigs Local.
·
our district? We h.llve to have a
· The facts are clear. You majority vote of the people for a .'
presenUy are paying 4 mills to 2\il mill bond ilsue.
.
the bond ri!Urement fund. U we
We have contacted the State
do not put the issue on tl)e ballot, Department and are w~Ung
·. you will pay 4 mlllil for nine more their approval of our proposed
years.
bond ilsue. Without the State
If you vote yes on the ilsue, you
Department's approval, we will
will be paying 4 mllll for nine be lost.
more years.
Another point to consider is
U you vote no on the ils"e, you
what the money from the bond
will be paying 4 mills for nine. ilsue can be used for in our
more years.
districi. I will discuss this point in
U we do not put the issue on the my nell column. We are I~
ballot, you wW be paying 4 mills for volunteers to serve on several
for nine more years.
committees we will be using for
The cillference ' II in the law . oW- campaign. If you would like,
through which we made an to serve as one of these COIIh
agreement with the State when
mittees, please contact my office
we got a loan to build the high at 992-2153.

Durie, Danny and Jennifer Fink,
Kitty, Jeff, Keith and Ginger Darat,
Nancy, Chuck, Jamie and Todd Anderson, Carroll, Oodie and Debbie
Cleland, Susie, Chuckle and Donna
Pulllna, Helen Bodlmer, Kaiberyn
Metqer, Sue, Amy and Shelly Metzger, Vldde, Short, Ray and Angle
RuueU.
On S.turday at the vacant lot .0.
!acent to the church, there will be 11

1DIJ0H,

0LW'(S, AIJD HOW
caJK, TOMATO ......,....-..,....-

OF

'

~ THEY'RE

NOT AHS~ER IH' THEIR
PHOHE AH' IT'5 AH EIIER6EHCY?
OH, 6EE ! l'O llETTER R~N
DOI'IH TV TH' MEDICARE
CENTER AH' FETCH
OR. LIIIR

ro ME WE'IIE

7:00.NIGHTLY

~ER:E , DOC!

ALL YOUR NOTES AND
RECORDS HAVE BEEN
DESffiOYEDI NOW
~EY'RE LOST J0
' MANKIND!

... IT'S STI LL UP
HERE! ONE OF

'THESE DAYS I'LL
PUT IT ALL OOWN ,
0111 PAPER AGAIIII!

•
•

''

· LD - 1'11enu1JIIle.·

....

EMR- Dorio Howley, Mile Lewit, Lori Gil'

1

using the assets or resources· of

others, rather than your. own,
should turn OlJI to be fortunate for
all. Make positive contributions,
but nofflnanclally.

r~sixth::gr:a:de:·._ _ _j___~l~~~~~~~=~~~

WELL, IT SURE
L00t&lt;9 LIKE. YOU
TWO HIT THE
JACKPOT/

•
I

'

IF 'JOJ'LL ALL
EXCUSE. ME, I'll
ljKE T060
SLEEP!

SURE,60 RIGHT

~HEAl?.

HAll A 61EY
1/A'I!

game. South 1s given no
chance to make h1s contract.

East puts hiS kmg of dia mond s on his partner 's queen.
If South ducks. East leads a

hea rt back and the defense

CBNUPDATENEWS
rEMOVIES
• CIJ MONDAYNIGHTATTHE
'The Sacko!ts' Stors:

i

. AQ J8
• QJ 9 6

+ H62

+6 52

•s o

t K tO
+ 7 54

53

SOUTH
+ AKJt09

• K10 9
t A7

+ A 10 8

Vulnera ble: Neither
Dealer: South
Norlb

Wesl

l~ast

Pass
Pass

Pass
Pas.~

Opening lea d:t Q

evenlu all y ~ets three heart
tnrks South s best play IS to

ta ke h1s diamond ace right
awav Then to draw trumps
and ' to lead a diamond from

dummy. In that case. East
musl pial. the ten (second
hand hi h in order to lea d a
heit r t
out

"~i e West

card ..

slill has an

t!S~u•"•r
by THOMAS JOSEPH

woven with ptrtontl r•llectiona to

ACROSS
38 Guarantee
IS. Air. fox 39 Nothing (Fr.)
5 Tailoring
40 - one's
item
oars (pause)
II "This Love 41 Concerning
of -"
DOWN
(1941 song) I Rf,vise
12 Nut
2 Merton's
13 Esau's
"The Waters
Y"'terday's Alltlwer
father-in-law of - "
14 Store sign
3 Skier's
9 Press
21 Like simba
Z5 Aperture
hazard
statement
IS "What 4 Poetaster's 10 Add honey
27 Lurch
My Love"
(1960s song) word
16 South African 29 Nino's
!&amp;.Undeveloped 5 C1eanses 19 Going into
beast
6 "All overtime
30 l.et it
stem
on deck !" 22 Hellenic
be
17 Pagoda
7 Before tee
township
heard
ornament
8 1957 Zinne- 22 Naval
18 They owe
31 Sierra RI8IUI
officer
36 Furrow
money
film
Islang)
37 Demier !0 Prosperous
21 "Uneasy tile head ... "
!Z Bernhardt's
rival

create thil epeclal that eloquenttv

Z3 More CUIUling

1

·

conveys tl\e Joya, demanda, trua·
tratlona and excitement of Judith
somogi't career 11 an emerging
X2_1Jng cooductor,

· Z5 Trojan belle 1:.-t--t-ZIConduce
lUI IACKITAQE: ALOOK AT Z'l ''It's lmpoe·
sible" CI'OOiler
IAIIIIAIY JONES In I documan·
11 ry 1001&lt; ot the oltcemeraactiYitloo
Zl Basebell's

tlve, effordable!1remlum.
Ltt us exp11lfn ~
supe~l!&gt;r features .

I'LL SAV ONE THING
FOR "'ORE MAN

LUK:ev-· HE'S BEEN
GOOD PERVIO€R

SHIES ONE ·... the
time we spend~ '~:;~;~:)

could · prove In1
·aniiN'Nardlng fo you.

'fEP·· LUI&lt;E'I'S

10:00
.

LOADED WITH

''GIT UP
AN'GO" .

THE~E
I

a call

of a popular televlaion aerltl,
writ era, actor~ and the produ~r
dlocu11 their rolll In getting pro·
gram 1 ~orn lnnlalconcoptlonto tin·
td bf'oadcaat prMtntation.
1:11 (VINING NfWB
{]) IBI LOU GRANT Wh~n

Carew
Zl Malicious
3Z Falstaff's

l

Garter

Cru1hor Corter. 1 hord hitting pro
tootblllltor, 11 1ued lor Injuring on

opponent, thtincldtntraiMaquaa- :
tiona at the Trlb ovar how w•n It
covert the touchy aubltct of

violence In 1port1. (80 mlno.)
(J) EL IALYADOII: ANOTHER
YIITNAM?KothyComplonhOitll
dlocuolionOnthapdllllcollllultion
and U.S. involvll!lant poWclo1ln El
tvodOr. (80 mlno.)

'/EARS

I

11tW.MelnttH1Q ~y,Oi
--'
iTATI
•
• AI,I'IOMOIILI· '
'

.
MUTUAL 1'
: ' INSURANCI
COMPANY

,,•
~

· I ~5 JUST
TALKING TOA
.FRUIT FLV...
-

.-

•.
•\.

'-!i' """''

50ME OF T~EM LIVE
OHLI{ TWENTV:FOVR flOURS?

HE TOLD ME HE HAD
ONLI( ONE REGRET...

HE SAID, ''I WISH I
KNEW AT NINE O'CLOCK
\.lltlAT I KNOW NOW"

10:"

11:00

•~a!lvaa.
(J) Ill

WI
PIITIYAL 01' 1'11A1k

I,

IIICIN1' GAUIIIY
IIIOIIIcMIII11:11
CIILIIIIOAftiiiWB
11:30 .Ill '1'111 TONIQII7 IHOW
- I holt: Joan RIVn. 0..1to:

r:

wt•

IIPtll " - · , . _ c-. (10

IIOIIUGUY INOW
IIOVIIo(WIIIIM••• ••TCHII
Hofft"1-

Z5 Cardin

AXYDLBAAXa
,lo ' LONGFELLOW
J
One leller simply stands lor anolher. In this 11mple A Is
used for the three L's. X lor the lwo O's, etc. Sln&amp;le letters,
apostrophes, lhe length .and formati?n ol lhe words are ·all
hintl. Each day the code l~llers are d1lreront.

' g••wllhhtriOI\81.
OUTIII UIITI

DIO 't'OU KNOW THAT

lr.-+-+-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:

10:21
CIIIU'DAft ..WB
10:30
--·IIIALED
'
MIUIIA IIANCNIITEIIIN
, CcillcltiT HBO pr-1 1 daz·
· zllng lhowiNiuriAG tho pop·rock
olngo&lt;wllo'l copttvotln8Amerlcln

I

3S Eng)Uh river
3t Road map
abbr.
of fashion
S1 Rllman
statesman

....
l

·mall the bandY coupon.
DALE C. WARNER ~

.m

Alan: "In lhe champiOnshi p

SQMOOICIIISicllmuolcloartlully

safeguard your opera·
. tlons. All for •*"1.¥ aHrac-

INSURANCE
'
'
.

leads e:~ hea rt . sticks in ~J s
nine and makes h1 s contract
since West must eithe r lead a
second heart to the king or
g i ve South a r uff and
disca rd ...

liJ ON STAOE WITH JUDITH

'tomotr.ow packa,.. plan
that .cciiJ)blnes an array
,'broad property and 11111)111·
·.ty coverages required

giVe Ul '

Oswald : ··In Lhe very good

psychiatric patient holdl Ann and
Mr. Peckltr hostage with lliJUn;
when the man ~ demanda a
helicopter and ranaom money, Or.
Michaela ttkeathe mtn ' e threat a
~kill Ann end Peckltr •eriOIIIIY.

SERlE$
P.Oilcy ... ONE'!'
. II .nnc~~~:~,: !l.

EAST

WEST

game. South ducks the first
di amo nd. but tak es lh e
seco nd . Th en he dra ws
trumps, ruffs dumm y's last
diamond. cashes all lhe clubs.

hil ~IY.wounded buddy.
8:30 • (I) Gal HOUBE CALLS A

YOIJ 1VE

. for:

Just

that Soulh should have du&lt;'ked
the first diamond."

Cook star a aa a aophlaticated Eng·
Uah gentleman'• gentleman hired
to reatore calm In the boistero us
household of Nan Gallagher, a
televlalon talk ahoW personali ty
whO can'tquitecope with domest jc
blema. (Premiere)

tal ion: 2hrs.l

I

.8

dOd

may be some d 1~cuss1o n ol
tough luck , but no one notwes

GREAT PERFORMANCES

IICIJ(jaJ M.A.S.H.F atho•Mulcohy
wagea a d11perate bathe to clean
up the •oorth before ti'Mt arrival ala
visiting cardinal: and a G.l . patient
badgtraHawktye and8.J. to cure

•• WINNIE

hea rt

Eventuall v. South loses lhree
and a diamond . There

Meaada,buildingarampupt~ea•de

•
•
•

d

hear ts

ot the mountain . The arrowa of the
Zealot• are not Silva's only problema; the heat Ia killing his soldiers
and his only trusted aide diaap·
provea of hia relattonahip with the
Hebrew woman he has taken cep·
tive. Stars: Peter O'Toole , Peter
Stra usa.(Pt .II of afour -pa rtpresen·

••
•

t .R4 2
+K Q3

plays hi~ nine . West takes th l'
trtck and continues dLamunds

Zealots' attacks are increased,
forcing Sliva to mount an attack,on

•

't»o • ou own or ooerate
. :small or
retail store,:offlce, apartj
'!TientJr church?
· .
Then-yilu
:State Auto

dumm v. leads

4·6-BI

+ Q74 3
• 75 3

takes his ace. draw s trumps
with three leads. stopp mg 1n

NOVEL FOR
TELEVISION: MASADA Tho

'•

•
•'

NOI\TII

hro.) (Ciosod·Csplionod: U.S.A.)

•

l'rindpol Donald lfiMinl '.. lhdbury
El..,.ntacy
Scllool hu llii10IIIICOd the honor ..U
lor the IOW'IIl Ill weeklll'ldllwperlod. Studonb
mU1not a "8" or above In all lhO~ JUblectuod
rwneGto&amp;heroUwere:
'
FIFTH - Goy llllter, Shem ~. 5cGU

By Oswald Jacoby
anJI Alan Sonlag

(I) 700!;l.UB
(J) (j}) •
ABC

•••

••

Good to championship play

Glenn Ford, Sam Elliott. The Sack·
ell brothers go up against a powerful bigot , fend off the vengeance·
eeeklng Bigelow brothers , and
face a challenge from e former
friend turned enemy. (Conclusion: 2

Miqht4 fine woman!
We qoin' t'miss 'er at
th' dump!

He'pin' a
lad4 t' move,
$lim!

List honor students

BRIDGE

8:30 (I) NEW BIBLE BAFFLE SHOW
8 (J) (jaJ THE TWO OF US Paler

8:58
8:00

.,

Jumbl• Bool No. 15; containing 110 puzzles, Is available lor $1.75 pottplkl
lrom Jumble, cJo lhls ilewspaper, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. ()7648. Include your
name,· 1ddt'tss. zip code and make checks payable to Nawapapetbooks.

'Priv ateHi alOry of a Campaign That
Failed' Mark Twain's tKPerience
lighting the Un ion troops In the Civil
Warwe s the be a is for thlaatory the t
tella at fif1een bovs from Hannibal ,
Mlaaouri wh o banded togethe r to
form the Marion County Rangers. II
stare Pat Hingle and tif1een young
actor11 as Twain 's comrades in
arm a. (90 mina.)

ALLEYOOP
' SEEMS

done- COWERED (coward)

one of America 's most chansmat1c
prlesta, Father Diorio; a group of
amputee skydivers make a brave
attempt to set a world's record in a
free fall linkup; and a young amne·
aiac. who loat hit memory when his
parenta died accidentslly , learns
that they may still be alive . (60
mins.}
0 (J) (jaJ PRIVATE BENJAMIN
Lorna Pa t1 arson at ara in the story ot
a pampered New York soC ialit~ ,
Judy Benjamin , who finds herself 1n
basic training in Today's Army.
(framlere)

(j)(fi)

' STILL GOT A PROBLEM

Answer : What he wh o sou nds like it might well have

Oswa ld: "Here is a hand
60 mine.) (Cioaod·Caplloned: , thai really illustrates the difU.S.A.)
., · ference between a good
. (I) AMERICAN CATHOliC
bridge gam e. a very good
(!] MOVIE ·(DRAMA)'" "High
bridge game and a champion·
And Tho Mighty" 1854
C1J MOVIE ·(ORAliA)'" \Ia "To ship game."
Alan: "In the good bndge
J:!IV.!,Ind HIVI Nol" 1944
ll!IIZIGI THAT'S INCREDIBLE A game. East plays hrs five of
breathtaking test flight in a solar
diamonds at trick one . Suulh
powered airplane; aretrun v~sit wi~h

, ANNIE

APRIL S-12

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon .

(Answers tomorrow)

PRAIRIE Almanzo learns a painful
andexpenai~eleaaon when he pur·
chaaea alarm for hlaluture bride,
Lauralngalla, and 101111 hia invest·
ment. (Part I of a two part epiaode;

CHUROI

Enjoy day of flying_ __,._ _ _ _ _ __

flying recenUy
at Refreshments
the Middleport
Community
Park.
of
soft drinks and potsto chips were
provided by the Board ol Cluiatlan
Education.
Attending were Jim, Mary
Marybeth Brewer, Judy, Sam and
Ryan Cowan, Pat, Clifford and Cllf·
font Tbomaa, Jr., &lt;;lara Noble and
Andy, Eleanbi', · Jeff and Daman

~liS
'

FAITH B.APnST

PISCES !Feb. 20·March 2G)
Situations tOday where you are

Children Or the Middleport First Easter egg hunt at I p.m. for the
Baptist Church enjoyed a day of kite children of the nursery through the

'll-\IS

t

HELPS iO CATCH
ONE IN THE
ACT.

1

Saturday .s I Jumbles WIN CE EXTOL BOTHER INDUCT

I

BORN LOSER

r)

ITEXENT
I KJ X)
Answer hare: A[ XXXI X) rI I )

I

REVIVAL

ner, Dovid llo{loon. Eric Smllh.
,1 ·
'Sil!TII - Jerry lllltw, Tim c-u, Tammy
Crtmeono. Down ~. Eddie Kitcnon. Judi
M'"'o~.Cincb: fUIIIe, Marte Smllh, Dcioold Skin,
Kim"'"""" SloniO)' -..,Tim llunl,nonHJndy,JullellyoeU, JoltNollori. ,

rJ

i

UTI\ 'OOioi

MONDAY
Rhonda Dalley to speak on the Red
Pl'O Monday at 7:30 ·p.m. at Cross disaster relief.
JAYMAR LADIES GOLF
Letart Elementary.
MEIGS BAND Boosters Monday ASSociATION meeting, 10 a.m.
at 7:30 p.m. in band room.
· · clubhouse. Members and t1roBe irlMEIGS FAIR Board meeting, 8 terested urged to attend. Weather
p.m. Monday at the secretary's of. permitting, .golf wUI be played
fice on the Rock Springs Falrgroun· 'ollowing meeting.
ds.
,.----:---------';RACINE BASEBALL Assn ,
meeting, 5:30p.m. Mooday at junior
high field. AU managers and persons
interested in help~ with tee baD,
'At The
pee wee aild little league teams
requested to attend.
SPRING REVIVAL beginning
Monday running through Aprilll at
7:30 p.m. at St. Paul's Qni~
First St.
Mason, W.Va.
Methodist Church in Tuppers Plainll.
·········HEAR·····~···
Different speaker each evening and
Evangelist
a number of vocal groups to appear;
public inVited.
"Herb" Capehart
SOUTHERN JUNIOR High
Athletic Boosters meeting, 7:30p.m..
Monday at junior high school to
Sunday - Sunday
discuss sports banquet.

Leah Dol&gt;

'I FESTOFl

(dpJ!!&gt;ned: U.S.A.)
6:30 C1JaCIJ NBC NEWS
(})THE pOOR
GREAT 5COTT!
YOU'RE LOOKING
!&gt;HE ACTUALLY
C!JMOVIE1COMEDY)"\Ia "RII· .
Al'.e YOU TELLING
AT IT, AII:~N'T YOUT...
CONFIDED IN
ME MAlt'!' MTEE~e MATToR OF FACT. SHE
DIZZit" .
YOU TAAT THEY
AND HEll. Ci.OP
11011 NEWHART SHOW
TOl-D ME A~ MUCH
HAD FOUND ·
OF A !IROTHE!l.
FA~ THE MUSIC
WHEN WE Wfi~E'
OIL f
,.,MY DEAR
(J) 1m CBS NEWS .
D/6COVEREIJ
OUT CHECKI'-1'
~ ·~---t CHAR PERIIAPS ·
WILD WILD WORLD OF
5r.JARE5!
OILF!
YOU'O8E KIND
ANIMALS
' ENOUGH TO LET
I.!UAS, YOGAAND YOU
ME lr.J ON THESE
18 ABC NEWS
EXCITING LITTLE
8:58
~IINUPDATENEWS
5eCRET5!
7:00 • PM MAGAZINE
NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
AU IN THE FAMILY
tllla FAMILY FEUD
NASHVIUE ON THE ROAD
(J) TIC TAC DOUGH
(jj)
MACNEIL·LEHRER
REPORT·
NEWS
7:30 • BULLSEYE
; WORDS OF HOPE
s,t.NFORD AND SON
LOOK, I ~'T DRill~
.'' ~'T COOl&lt; FRcW.
8 (J) JOKER'S WILO
FROO ~ &amp;\L.K ..,....-·/'}
·HOLLYWOOD SOUARES
ltte OIIJII-)(i:) I&lt;OOM
(jj) DICK CAVETT SHOW
%AT NJ'{MD~...
T~\
RICHARD SIMMONS SHOW
II FACE THE MUSIC
7:58
.!;_BN UPDATE NEWS
8·00 . Cil liTTL£HOUSEONTHE

LOCATe T,HE
50URCE OF
TH&amp; OIL.
SEEPAGE!

'Sentinel SOcial Calendar

flaMing, Dovtd Snlllh, Penny tiort,

I I KJ tJ

Kanin, author, playwright and director. Hoat: ttugh Downs. (Ciosed-

&amp;ASYAND

!&gt;YHenriArnoldandBobLee

Unscramble thes:e four Jumbles,
one tetter to each &amp;qljare, to form
four ordinary words.

(j] OYER EASY Guett: Garso n

' SA!UI~

meeting, 7:30 p.m. Monday at
Racine Masonic Temple. Officers
SPECIAL MUSIC NIGHRY
and members are asked to be
present to help plan for May 4 inEVERYONE.
spection.
.'
,
nJESI}AY
INVITED
REGULAR MEETING, Middleport Lodge 363, F.i.AM, Tuesday,
TO ATTEND
7:30p.m.
ELECTION OF officers and for- I~~~~~~~~~~~
matlon ol conunittees and a !discussion on formation of Tuesday
evening golf league when JayMar
Men's Golf Aslin. meets at 7 p.m.
Tuesday at the club house.
SUTI'ON TOWNSIUP Trustees
Tuesday ·8 p.m. at Syracuse
Municipal BUilding.
POMEROY CHAPTER, OES
Tuesday, 7:45 p.m. with election, installation and initiatory work. Practice, 7:30 Monday night.
. HUMAN R&amp;'!O{fflCE COUNCIL,
noon. Tuesday at the Meigs Inn.

r:lJ ~ ~L~..!h

NEWS
RAINBOW FACTORY
CAROL BURNETT AND •
FRIENDS
· (J) ABC NEWS
(J) 3-2·1CONTACT
.

-

RACINE CHAPTER 134 OES

'i}JI~NJ ji)'i} \'jl THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

Television
•
•
VIewmg

By Sapt. !&gt;a~ E: Gleaoa
CUITei(IOIIIart
. .
~ tl\'ening I \lll1 ~ abOut

ton presented the "Snips . of
· Wisdom" speaking on azaleas and
rhododenaron. She showed branches
of desiduous and evergreen plants,
noting that they need acid soil, partial shade, good drainage, and .
protection from the wind. She said
they should be planted on the north
side near buildings and before purchasing from a nursery should find
out if the plants are hardy.
For best results, Mrs. Barton
suggested working ~ulphur into the
soil two weeks before planting, and
then put drainage rocks into the hole
before planting. She also suggested
mulching with spaganwn moss
because cultivation harms roots. To
keep the soil acid, use of cotton or
soybean meal and vinegar were
recommended.
Sheila Taylor and Janet Koblentz
demonstrated various macrame
knots showing three different
methods of starting macrame
hangers. They completed three
plant hangers from white polyester
cord.
Mrs. Barton displayed a collection
of six different varieties of daffodils,
Mrs. Chadwell, a double pink
African violet: and Mrs. Young, a
spring arrangement of pachasandra, yew, forsythia , jonquils and
hyacinths.
Ruth Ervin won the door prize.
Mrs. Krautter used an arrangement
of forsythia in a ceramic pitcher at
her door. Members . viewed. her
many blooming African violets.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Krautter and Mrs. Young.

6, 1981

CllfPTOQUOTES
.

so

ESK

SOL

QBDOFR ~

S D L

Yii.WdllJ;I

IVBIKLOZU

SOURCES OF

A K R .

WSOTH

ZTMTHO. B

=Sill: ONE OF mE. GREATESt

RING IS TO HAVE AN INBORN SENilE

OF HONOR. - DE CASSEl®&gt;
I

EKVZR

WSOTHL

�Sentinel
Monda

Meigs County
Agent 's Corner
BY JOHN C. RICE
Extension Agent
Agriculture
About the best thing you can do for
your car, tractor or truck is to keep
it "well oiled." All\l you can't tell
your oils without knowing the numbers and letters.
The numbers simply show
viscosity, a rating of an oil's ability
to now . Alow viscosity number, for
instance a number 10, means that it
flows very easily. Low numbered oil
is best in winter months - for easier
starting and for better lubrication
wben starting.
A higher number, like a number
40, means that it does not flow as
well but that it provides better
lubricatiOn for a hot engme.
Typically, the classifications stamped on cans are 20, 30, 40, and 50, or
SW, !OW, ISW. The W mdicates that
it's for winter use. When theW is absent it'sa summer grade.
Some oils are blends, to get a
multi-viscosity. For instance, a
IOW40 tells the conswner that this oil
can be used in a cold engme and
operates just like a 10 weight oil. It
can also be used in a waflD or hot
engine and operate like a 40
Letters Uke SC and CD on the contain er mdicate the servi ce
classification and are very impo r tant , say s Joe Gliem ,
agricultural engineer at The Ohio
State University' They follow the letters API and have two des1gnal!ons
- one for gasoline engines and one
for diesels.
The series for gasolme engines
starts with SA and goes through SF.
For instance , SA, SB, SC. The lower
end of the spectrwn, the SA is a
straight mineral oil, very light duty.
The upper end is (or several
operating conditions.
The series of oils fo ~ di ese l engines

Garden club meets

Riverview Garden Club's March
meeting was !Jeld at tbe.home
'
of Mrs. Richard Roberts. Co.
hostesses were Mrs. Depver
Weber and f)lrs. )i:rnest
Whitehead. Devotions, A Bit of
Wisdom, and an article on the
start·out with a CA and go through
Lord's
Prayer were presented by
CD. Once again, the CA is a very
Mrs, Ronald Cowdery. This was
light duty type of classification and
concluded
witjl all repeating 'the
the CD is for heavy duty use.
Lord's
Prayer.
RoU call was anBe sure to check the ·operator's ·
swered
by
members
exchanging
manual for your vehicle to find out
a
house
plant.
·
what is reconunended in' terms of
A
business
session
was
conv is c osity and of service
ducted by the president, Mrs. Erclassification.
nest Whitehead. In observance of
Oil should be changed at least as
Arbor
Day, members voted to
often as it says to in the manual. It
pay
on
an evergreen for tbe
does wear out, especially the adRiverview
School lawn. Mrs.
ditives in it - the anti-foam ·
Donald
Putman
will take care of
inhibitors, the oxidation inhibitors,
planting
nowers
in the school
and the detergents. When operating
sign
planter.
Thank
'you notes
the engine in dusty conditions, the
were
read
from
Mr.
and Mrs.
oil, oil filter, and air cleaner should
Gene Wilson and Mrs. Tom Spenbe changed more often.
cer.
Contamlnants sometimes slip into
For the program Mrs. Harliss
oil. The big ones are dirt and water.
Frank
presented an informative
To keep them out, store and· pour
on
care of house plants.
paper
with clean containers. Don't let a
She
told
that
the clay pot is !he
can part full sit out where dust and
ideal house plant container, good
water can collect on it and then haP'
potti'n g soil is important,
pen to get into the conlamer
watering
and the correct amount
Slow-flowing drains in the house
of
light
is
necessary for good
may indicate more serious trouble
healthy
plants.
Also for the
than just a clogged pipe. This is the
program
Mr.
and
Mrs. Ernest
time of year that water logged soil
Whitehead presented interesting
can prevent septic system disposal
of their vacation tnp
slides
fi elds from operating at peak
through
the western states last
capacity, perhaps causing a back-up
fall.
Highlighting
their trip was
mto the house. A back-up is
viewing
Mt.
St.
Helen's
from a
especially hkely to happen if a septic
plane.
system has been overloaded or not
Games were conducted by Mrs.
maintained regularly.
Okey
Connolly and Mrs. Ray
The septic tank should be pumped
Young. Prizes were awarded.
out every two years, unless little
The
door prize went to Mrs. Consudge or scum has accwnulated, acnolly.
Refreshments were served
cording to Byron Bondurant, Exto
Mrs.
Frank Bise, Mrs. Walter
tension agricultural engmeer at The
Brown,
Mrs. Connolly, Mrs.
Ohio State University.
Cowdery,
Mrs. Frank, Mrs.· HerEveryone in the household should
man Grossnickle, Mrs .
be instructed not to dispose of any
Claremont
Harris, Mrs. Roy Hanitems other than human or ground
num,
Mrs.
Ronald Osbo~ne, Mrs.
fOOd wastes and the accompanying
Putman,
Mrs.
Gene Young, Mrs.
waste water mto the system. The
Ray
Young
and
Mrs. Lyle Baldersolid waste collection service should
son.
be used for all other wastes.

.--'Loiiiiidf:ou~

FINANCIAL
REPORT OF THE
MEIGS COUNTY
BOARD OF
EDUCATION

For Fiscal Year
Ending December

31. 1980

Meigs Countv School
District, County of Meigs,
Addres s: Post Office Box
684, Pomeroy, OH 45769,

Date : March 24, 181.

I certtfy th e following
report to be corr ect :
Robert E. Bowen,
Treasurer
M eigs County
Board of

Public Notice

Public Notice

Ca sh
Reconclltat ton

Tolal Fu nd

Bala nces Dec

31. 1980

$63,5 14.96

Depository Bala nces
County
Treasurer
67.578 13
Sub . Tota l Depositor y
Balances
67,57 8 13
Undepos1ted
Montes
.00
Ou tstanding Warr ants
December 31,

1980

Reconciled
Balance

4,063 17

63.514 9h

,---""--------------------;
..

I
I
I'
I

~

I
I

I

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classifieds and
Savell I

1980

Tota l Receipts and

Transfers

Total Receipts,
Transfers and

Balances
Transfer s

Expenditures and

Net Balance
1980

1
1
I

I

;I
I
'I
I

32. _ _ _ __

_

11. _ __ _ __
33 _ _ __ __
12. _ __ _ _~ 3• . _ _ __ _ __
13. _ _ _ _ __
35 _ _ __ _ _
14 ·---~-15 . ----~-

16. - - - - - - : -

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Ohio45769

. 1.---------------~----·-··-·

61.933.29
00

61 ,933.29

Bal ance J anuary 1,
Total Rece1pts and

Transfers

To ta l Rece ipts,
Transfers and
Bal ances
Exoend 1tures and
Transfers

00

Less
Encumbrances
Net Balance
(Teac her Devel op

00

menl)
1',581.61
SCHEDULE Ill

Recetpts by
Source
Genera l Fund Bal ance

'\1
HONOR SOCIETY- NIDeteen junlon and lleulon
of Meigs High Scbool were ladllcled Into the Meigs
Cha)lter of the National Hoacr Society during
ceremoDies beld Sllllday al1eroooo ID tbe blgb liChool
cafeteria. Pareata were gaesll for tbe eveaL IDducted
were, front, I tor, MelaDie DDiard, Pam Croob, Tam-

.
.
) ;
my Elcblnger, Lyue OUver, Helen Slack; aeeODd, I to ~
r, Phyllis Dam, LortRupe, ~D.muer, Krlltblb- J. ~
denon, Laura Sml&amp;b, Robin Harder, Jeau llortoa; :
blick, I tor, De.alleTuraer, Mart McGalre, Ed Lester;:, ;
Mart Cline, Dave Hoffman, Fred Yoaaa, Jeuette ;
Coot.
..
)

:&lt;

Honor students named

OLD CDI NS, pocket wat·
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
silver. Call J . A. Wamsley,
Treasure Chest Coin Shop,
Athens, OH . 594-4221.

Principal Charles Holliday of the Saleni Center
Ele11Mm~ry School has announced the honor roll
forth~ fourth :iix weeks grading penod. Students
making a " 8" ur at&gt;ove 10 all the1r ~ubjects and
named to the roll were :
'
F'i rst grade - Shayne Aspin, Andrea Hale.
Ten-y McGu1rc, Darcy Stune 1 Mathew Haynes
Secorn gnule - Raerw Ebhn, April Napper,

Wanled·to Bur: class rings,
wedding bands, anyllllng
stamped, lOK, 14K, or 18K
gold. Sliver coins, pocket
watches. Call Joe Clark at
m -2054 at Clark's Jewelry
Store, Pomeroy, Ohio 4.1769

Jenny Poytun , Richard Poyton, Dennis EdIJ~ton, Becky Shamblm, Michael Jacks, Tmu
Molden.

Third grttde - Wt!ndy Gilkey, T~unmy Lambert, Anne Williams, Jeremy Stone, Anne
WJlllam.'i. •
Fourth grt~de - Ben Bell , Cmdy Maynard . •
Sherry Bla1 r, Tart! Chtrk. Steve Gilbreth, Keith
Hll'k.'i, Cit thy Hob!itetter, Rubble Jacks, JodJ
l..evm~.stun , Kelly O~den. Kevin 0Jler, Tnna

CHIP WOOD. Poles max .
diameter 14" on largest
end. $12.50 per ton. Bundled
slob. $10 .50 per IQn .
Delivered to Ohio Pallet
. Co.. Rock Springs Rd.,
Pomeroy 992·26119.

Rh006, Loi.s Ro.se, TimStbne, Renee' Youn15:. ·
Fifth gr~tde - LaurJe Shenefield, MHrgaret
•Rhodes. Eli zabeth Thornton, Angle Wright,

Missy Bll:lck. 1
Sixt.h grade- Enn Andenon, MlcheUe Barr,
Jon Bell, Tracy McKmney, K r 1sh Haynes. Dave

Smtih.

Coming event
MIDDLEPORT-The Middleport
Amateur Gardeners wiU meet at 8
p.m. Wednesday at the home of Mrs.
Marjorie Fetty, Pomeror.

4,792 .20
3,2 10.53

Total Support Se r vices

- Pup ils

11 5,092.49

RECOGNIZED- Debbie FIDk, center, was presented ·a trophy for
having lost75 pounds through the Sllad~rella program1with Carolyn Van ·•
Meter, right, receiving a 35 pound weight loss certificate and ribbon, aod '
Betty Dill, a 20 pound weight loss ribbon and certificate at a•~nt , ·;
meetlug of Slladerella. Jo Aon Newsome Is tbe Slladerella lecturjlr. At : .
last week' s Pomeroy class, Joan Vaughan, Betty Dill, and Debbie Fink :~
lost the most height with Joyce Baggy as nmnet-up. AI the Masoll 'class, . .
'Kim Hall lost the most welgbtand runner-up was Frances OUer.
'

Total Fi xe d
Assets

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

S- Hippy ACII
t - LOit and Found
7- 'I'Ud S" l
1- Pwbl ic Si lt
I AY Chon

pointment,
Decedent s
Name and Address and

Case Number/are listed :
Victor Brown, 42960 s 1.
Rt. 124,_ Minersville, Ohio
45763, e xecutor, Feb. 27,
1981 , Agnes Co leman ,
Brown's Trailer Ct ., Miner sville, Oh io 45763, 23352.
Paul J Gerig, P. 0 . Box
268, 3 w. Stimson Ave. ,
Athens·. Ohio 45701, Ad·

Tolal Assets
Com bined Net
Equity

Public Notice
NOTICE TO'
CONTRACTORS
STATE OFOHID
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
March 27, 1981
Contract Sales
Legal Copy No.
81 -244
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
Sealed proposals will be
received at the Office of the
Director ollhe Ohio De par·
tment of Transportation,
Coiumbu~, Ohio, unll110 :00
A.M., Oh10 Standard Time,
)uesday, Aprl 21, 1981, lor

e RENTALS
u - Houus tor Re'lt
41- Mobllt Homu
lor It tn t
44- Aputmt ntl or Rent
45- FRooml
46- Spau lor fhnt
4 '- W•nl~toR e nt

41- Equ lpm t nllor Rtnl

Downie Nelson, 4931 Nor.-

lh St., St. Rl . 611 NW, Me·
Connelsville, Ohio .0756,
Executor, March 2, 1981 ,
Ora Nelson Prolflll aka
P. Nelson and Ora
11.115.00 Ora
Nelson, Route 3, County
75,484.96 Rd.
1, Albany, Ohio, 23356.
75.484.96 (3) 23, 30, (4) 6, 31c

!416. li e

4- GI VtiWIY

FiduciArY 's Name, Ad·
dre&gt;S and Tille, Date of Ap·

Ceil I. Longstreth aka Celia
I Longstreth , 32445
Woolyard Rd., Albany ,
Ohio45710, 23348.
Gene Yost, R. D. Racine,
Ohio 457711 Administrator
With Will Annexed, Merch
10, 1981, Hallie H. Paynter,
Portland, Ohio, 23351.

.00
balance
4
63,51 .96
Inves tments
.00
Accounts Receiv·
a ~l e
.00
Inventory
855.00
Tala I Current
Assets
64,369.96
Fixed
Land
.00
Bu il di ngs
.00
Equipm ent
11 .11 5.00

Expenditures
by Function

Public Notice

The

Receipls
292 ,496.87 ' on hand
SCHEDULE V
Deposi tory

Cash

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

1- C,.r el ot Ttt•nk s
2- ln Memon•m
l - AnnOllnumenh

.

min istrator, ~arch 4, 1981.

PHONE 992-2156

eANNOUNCEMENTS

Public Notice
OF FIDUCIA~Y

following persons
Total Suppor t Se rvice s
~were, on the dates shown,
- In str uction
appointed to administer the
Stall
62,960.34 follow i ng de cedents '
Total Suppor t Services
estates pending in the
- General Adm 54,066.42 Me1gs Cou nty Probate
Court : ,
Total SupporJ Ser vic es
Tota l Suppor t Ser vices

Public Notice
PROii'ATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY,OHIO
Estate Of NANCY REED,
Deceased
case No. 2J887
NOTICE
To all Creditors of said
Decedent :
Not ice is hereby given
that on the 26th day ol Mar·
ch, 198 1, the Wood County
Bank. E ~ecutor ol the
Estate oil Nancy Reed
deceased, tate of the City ol
Parkersburg" County . of
Wood, and otate of West

...

'·"

rran~;;rreJ.~r\ia,,::

j

'

..
~

'

3
Announcements
I PAY highest prices q

possible for gold and silver...~
coins. rings, jewelry, etc~ ,..,~

'ontact Ed Burkett Barber, ..
.,
'hop, Middleport.

Now buying gold and
sliver, old pocket watches,
chains,

11
Hetpw~nttd
GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gills as a Sen·
line) route carrier. Phone
us right away and gel on
the eligibility list at 9'12·
2156 or 992·2157 .
•

Each bidder shall be YOUR
P-IANO . Tod ~
required to file with his bid
a certif i ed chec k or valuable to neglect, .. pert •
cash ier's check for an tunl ~g &amp; and repair. Lane ' 1
amount equal to five per Daniels, 742·2951 or 9'12· · .cent of his bid, but in no :.!082.
payable-to the Director .
Bidders must apply, on
the proper forms, lor

qualift cat ion at least ten

days pr ior to the date set

for opening bids in ac-

cordance woth Chapter 5525

Ohio Revised Code .
Plans and spec ifications
are on fil e in the Depart ·
ment of Transparation and

.

·'

Racine

Volunteer Fire •
Department sponsors a
shot . gun &amp; r ille match
every Sal.-'n lght 6:30 p.m: I
at their bu ilding In Bashan. '
Factory choke 12 guage ,:
shot guns only . Open sights
22 rille.
"

S185.00 to S500 weekly doing
mail ing work . No ex·
perlence required . AP·
PLY : Circle Sales, P.O.
Box 224-D, Richmond Hill,
NY 1W8.

'

MEIGS MUSEUM open by
the office of the District appointment J anuary·Mar·
ch. m -2264, 992·2802, 992· "
Deputv Director .
The Director reserves ' 23611 or 9'12·2639. Histories .1
the right to reject any and far sal e Pomeroy · :!
all bids.
' Middleport Libraries.
DAVID L. WEIR
DIRECTOR
Rev. 8·17·73
IT' S BEELINE ' S Show and ,;
Tell
Time! Il l! Our. new "
13) 30, (4) 6, 2tc .
spring and summer line Is "

WANTED . People to
Avon. Work your
houn. Parl·llme or
tim. II Interested call
2354 or 742·2755.

-

now available and is it un·' rn
bel ievable!!! ! Give us a- :
call for more Information ' !I

Public Notice

aboulthls Interesting work.
Phone9'12·39411rom 9·6.
'"
&lt;

LOCKSMITH . Service,::.
Master Keying , Com· ••
binatlons, Bonded. Call : ·:~ ' ·
New Haven, W.Va. 304·882·"'

'J!J79 .

R.ACINE Gun CluB has~,.l
doscontlnued gun shoots un·. I:
til September.
"·

,, '

""

POMEROY

0

carot

G

lANDlV.RK
SPRING ·SALE ' ,.'

..

APRIL 8-llth

.

Register
for ' '
Prizes!
'I
"
First Prize: The .
,.
new Ford Escort
2nd Prize: Hot'
!'Oint Refrigerator '
•
- Freezer
lrct
Prize: : 5 . . ' "
u
Microwave Ovens ' •''
"
4th
Prize:
5 u
n
Homelite
stri.n g :11,
trimmers .
.
'~

'

-

.

..

PJus 65 o:E.
Clock Radios

--·

,,,

""....
•

,I

PRIZES .

"

Register &amp; Win I

,,,

v

•

Lost e!MI 1'0111141

progreulve rock band or
lead guitarist wanted. Con·
tact Garv File. 992·3627 or
992·5026 anytime.

"

2 bleck • ten llftlllt IIUPIE1 ·~.
melt, 1 femelt. LOll In .
Lllert eree. II 10111141 C.ll "
1.0·3125.
'

wall

MATURE. older woman In
Middleport to babysit
Mon. ·Frl . 992·5252. Must be
reliable.
POOL Manager &amp; llfeguar·
dtlar ~ondOn Pool. Written
appll~etiiHll must be sub·
mltttcf'•• mailed to ~anlce
Ltwson, Clerk, Syracuse
Vlll19f, Syracuse, Oh. by
Aprll13 .
12 Sltuetlons Wenled
WOMAN Seeking em ·
ploymtnl, HOijlllat, Dr. of·
flee of Clinic e1 recep·
tlanlsl or Medical recordS.
Any shirt or cltys. K~
medlcel
terminology .
Relerenc:•. 742-2030,
RE:PAIR or remoellllng
-k, flaon, Claorl, well
lltlllllng, celtlng, or floor
tllt,sldlng. 992-2759.
HAVE vecency. Cere,
room, IIOilrd • leundt'v lor
tnvatlcl or tlcltrlr Pft'IDIII.
11-blt. 992·"l22.
Wltl babysit In mr home In

••

-'"·..

3

syr- or roura.
~U

E•-

IIIII Will lilt lily
..... ..._ 992-3110, 992·
Ptt'ill

2Jlt,ort4fo2191.

'

'

,,

c

0

more

·Truck Repair
• Rebuilt Automatic
Transmissions
on

INTERNATIONAL Cub·
Cadet 12 h.p. 42" mower,
good cond. Hudrostat ic
Sl,650 . Days 992·5545
evenings 949 2216.

()

~;~~=;=~~:::;:;:;::;:~~;:~;~
,4

Apartment
lor Rent

Brick house on wooded lot . 3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
Three bedrooms, large kit· IS . Phooe 9'12 5434.
chen, familY room; double
garage, deck. Mid·Sixlies . In M iddleport, 4 room apt .
and 9'12·5420.
utilities inc lu ded in rent.
in·

most American MOdel

H; L WRITESEL
ROOFING

m

EAFORD~

VIRGIL B. SR .. 1'"0'
_ 16 E. Second Street
•
Phone
1__(_614 1_992 _3325

21 ACRES -

of high

land with minerals and

TP water. Good house
sites, only $15,000

LARGE -

4 bedroom

state ly home with 2
baths. In town near
schools and stores. Cen

tral heat wolh wood
burner
supplement .
Nice glass enclosed
back porch , large 2 ca r
garage and oversized

lot .
.
FAMILY HOME - 5
bedr.ooms , new bath ,
natural gas furna ce
heating, c ity wat er ,
fami ly room , dining

room. Lots of paneling
and

nice

carpeting

LargeJol.
COUNTRY HOME -

Nice 3 bedroom home

with large fenced yard
and good business
building for your part·
time business . Roomv
home with new siding ,

central heat and dr il led
well . You' ll like this tor
only 131,000.
TOWN - Good 7 room
home with bath, forced
air natural gas furna ce,
J
bedrooms.
siM

carpeted, ' basement .
Garage and nice 101 .

Asking 127,500.
IN TEN YEARS THE
SPACE YOU RENT,
YOU PAY FQR, BUT
NEVER OWN. 'ALL
H2-Jl25 TO HAVE.

Housing
Head uartPrs
Real Estoto

General

Crow~~sa~:n.

condition ing and cable tv.

1973
14 x 65, 773·5651.
three bedjooms, new car·
pel. 1971 Cameron, 14 x 64,
Space lor Rent
twb bedrooms, new carpet. 46
1972 Champion. 12 x 60. two COUNTRY MOBILE Home
bedrooms, new carpet. 1976 Park, Route 33. North of
Cameron, 12 x 60, two Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
bedrooms, all electric . 1971 9'12-7479.

Skyline, 1 1'2sx 6), two
'bedrooms, bath &amp; 1/J , new

carpet. 1970 PMC ,
12 x 60, two bedrooms, new
carpet. B x S Sal~s . Inc. ,

'2nd x Viand Street, Point
Pleasant, WV Phone 675·
4424.

REDUCE Sale &amp; last with
GoBese Tablets &amp; E·Vap
"water pills" Nelson Drug .

4 acres with 70xl4 trailer, 2
car garage 20x27. 3 miles

from Rac ine or Co. Rd. 28.
Call alter 5 p m 949 '2618
8&gt;45 2 bedroom tra11er.
51,950 Brown's Trailer
Park . 992-3324.

- -·- -- -

Phone 773·5651 .
47

__ _.. , .....
-·····--···
.... . .
'

Land for corn in Chester

area . Bill Counts, 995 3831.
MeFEbiitAdlse

1975 Granvil le 12x60 three
bedroom . Completely fur· 53
=.__ _-.:A"'n"'li"'q"'
ue"'s~-­
nlshed . Awning &amp; storage
CIM·
building. Set up in Country ATTENTION :
Mobile Home Park . Pr iced POIHANT TO YOU) Will
on inspection 992·7479.

pay cash or certifi ed check
for antiQues and collec

libles or entire estates.
1972 Regency 12x60 2 Nothing too large. Also,
bedroom mobile home, new guns , pocket watches and

slove &amp; refrigerator, new
carpet, natural gas heat,
washer &amp; dryer 992-6711.

New 1

Models

l'·rinlt·cll,ullt"rn

All new Wallmark
Homes starting at
510,983 for 14' wide,
2 BR.
Pav·ments

Approx.

1•6.00 per mo. Finane·
ing Available.
•

location, on a level

acre tot. Priced to sell
$32,500.00.
OWNER WILL HELP
FINANCE! - This 5
bedroom home, in e)(-

cellen1 condition can be
yours. Located near the
new bridge, II has a nice
kitchen, spaclpus living
· dining room, enclosed
Nlco lot. 132,000.00.
GOOD
STARTER
HOME With 3
bedrooms, dining, llv·
lng, kitchen, large 1'1&gt;
acre

lot

near

Four 15,000 gallon tanks
located above ground at

Athens , Ohio. $3,000.00
each Phone I 304 422·2781 .

tovvn .

$25,000.00.
CENTRAL AIR FOR
THE COMING SUMMER! - A one floor
plan . with 3 bedrooms,
lull basement, nice
patio, carpeting. In
town. 121,500.00.
COUNTRY COTTAGE
- 3 bed'ooms, lull base·
ment, aluminum siding.
Needs
some
reclecoratlng. 114,500.00.
BORDERS - FORKED
RUN LAKE - 13 acres
of recreation land .•
Greet for 1&gt;unllng and
fishing. $11,000.00.
WE HAVE OVER 10
PROPERTIES
TO
CHOOSE FROM. FINANCING AVAIL AILE . OPEN t-5 MON.SAT,.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.

stereo. power windows,
stearong &amp; disc brakes. Till

81

"'"·"

ASSOCIATES
JHn Trusnll "'·2UO
Rottr &amp; Dottle Turner
992·1692

'"'"Yb.

2 bedroom IPirlment In
Pomeroy . 992·5621.
NEWLY remoeleltd 1
bedroom IPI· furnllhtd,
utlllii•Jnctudeel. 992·3190.

.

Home
Impr-ovements

Gene' s Carpet Cleaning,
deep stream extraction.

Free

est imated ,

reasonable

rates,

:~~;:r~~ctors

ceil mgs .

)

*

.......

Patllnl ~
1 ~1
The Dally sentinel

U3
lillltPrltll
11 ~-ss.
'"' In
11011.

SIDING CO'
" Beautiful, 'ustom
Built Garages".
Call tor lree siding
estimates, 949-2801 or
949·2860.
No Sundar Calfs

992-6215or99H314

A~L

Fann Buildings
Sizes

SMALL

C&amp;n't

re·wlrlng,

http )'OU

TIRES GOING BALD?
We haw: Firestone 72h aild we

in·

Rl . J, Box s.·
R1cine, Oh.
Ph. 614-143-lnl
6·15-llc

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
Ph::2~~~-·-!~~~!:.J

eHotW aler link s
Repairl nt 51nct !UJ

..- Cotn L ~ undries
..- Rtmlill Pr oiM!rltes
... Apl HOYSt Owners
..- Mob1l e Hom t P il rk ~

""Nil

SPRING CARPO SALE
2 Rolls
Rubber Back

CARPET
From .

SHAG

From

7-.99 &amp;up

HOME

5

Reg . S15.95
$'799 Sq.
/- Yd.

12.95 &amp; up

1

~

Cash·n·Carry

.lnslolltd

PARTS

Bur Now &amp; Save S2-S6 Per Yard .
25 rolls carpet in stock to pick from.

window cnnks
Mobile Home Roof
'oollng
Mobile Home Doors
Mobile Home ~ock Sets
Mobile Ham• Anchors
Home Awnings
Home

Regular backed carpet installed free,
with pad . ·
1
Drive A Little- Save A Lot

RUTlAND FURNITURE

Main st.

•

742-~211

Edges
14

~IES
ttNIIF

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - ex tensive remodeling
• Electrical work
• Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
3- , . mo .
2 1

TERMITE and
PEST CONTROL

guarantee

Located in Gallipolis
Ph. 614-446·2101
J·27·1 mo .

r-;:~;;==.=;=;±:::;;:=:;::;~~==t========~
Rutland
Carpet ~

MOBILE .

.

eOtSIIW.1 5htr S

•R t~ l1g t5

. FRE£ ESTIMATES
1 or s year termite

KITCHEN

.

•Dryers

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

t llll'letP

.

3 . .15

ALL MAJ&lt; E5
• DnPG~I IS

• 4oiils htrl

Sizes from 4X6to 12x40

Cash 'n'

Minersville, Olllo

1~1

985-3561
P AtHS AND SE R VICE

Roaches ,
Bir ds , ·
Rodents, Spi ders, Fleas,
Ants and other smal l in·
sect confrol .

Utility Buildings

GOING BALD?

Electrical
&amp; Refrlger•llon

1.75

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Call Ken Young

STEEL

"From l0x30"

UIF flltlllltiiiiWitlll. .15
l»ffa'A ..... 1.75

.

I mo

- Addons and
remodeltng
- Roofing and gutter
work
-concrete
work
-Plumbing and
electrical work
1 (Free Eslimates)
' V.C. 'YOUNG II

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

KIHGSBURY HOME
SALES PARTS &amp;

il$1.

lor F ytyre ltelt r enc:e

1·304· r~~======3:·:11~·tl:c~f.~==P=o:m:e:ro:':·=O=h=·=~;=======:::

ZIP,SU£,114.
_.l
Wt sllamlined the sewina lo
,.,. lOll time so JOU an save
money' Send now lo&lt;' NEW I'Mil
SPRING-SUMliER PATTERN CAT·
ALOG. 100 styles. lrte )11!1trn
~ (12 Yllutl
IJ4ol4!lcliJIIIII! ..

~

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

BISSELL

Free

revisions. modifications,
residential,
Slallalion,.
farm , business. No lob to
large or to small. Available
immediately. Bill Cadle at
9927182

as 100 do now. Soft sleeles. soft
lither!, softly flared to pop Oier
pinl!, slurts.
Prinled Psttem 4529: Hall S11es
m . I4~ , 16~. 18 \1, 20~: Women's Sizes 34, 36. 38. 40, 42, «.
46,18.
$2.00 .. liCit ..... 11;11
.. )lltllni .. llnl-da
llitUI ........ s.H.

nu sAd

Pu \ h &amp; sell pro

n ? 2VH

PH

Keep

~=========i-=======----+---------

Ex(avating

wiring,

H01e ate lhe ll&amp;ht 'n' klole tops
')OU'IIIoiejustas much net15eason

Trash Pickup In
The Village of
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-5016
or 992-7505

'

SNA PP E R - Push I sell pr o
mow ers , ndmg lroi (IOU
A rtA S- r 111 e r ~
WEEO EATER - Br us ii CYIItr &amp;
1r1mm l'rs
STIHL- Brush cullen &amp; tr1 m
men
Y AlOO- H t whee l mowe rs
We 1er vice Whit we sell!
Sma ll E ngtl1ti- 0 Yr Spectalt y
104 Co11clor Sl
Pome ro n Oh.

Ph. Pomeroy
614-992-7038
311 ·lmo

scot·

t~ e ho ril

GRA \/ El Y- WA ik

• Heat Pumps
• Electric Heating
&amp; Wir ing
Industria l, Commer cial
and Res1dent1al

'
Available to handle
all your

Trailer Court, Minersville.

1 bedroom furnished apert·
mant In Mlddleeort .
Ulllltln lncluqed. S225.
month. 992-5$45 days,
ev..,lnos 949·2216.

GRAVEL'JI TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

ELECTRICAL co.

whee l. 99'2·5307 after 5 p.m

84

9'12·3324.

Apartm..,t
tor Rtnt

PACQUAL£

Dllcher work. Gas·Water·
Electric installed. 742·2819
before 9:00p.m.

Mobile Homes
lor Rent
2 bedroom Mobile Home.
Adults only. Brown ' s

SERVICE

J ll · l mo.

if needed. 949·22'13.

42 .

Utilities pold . Two
bedroom mobile home and
one bedroom apartment.
Ont child accepted. John
Sheets, 3 and one hall miles
lOUth ot Middleport on Rt.
7.

PH . 992·2882
992·260&amp;
992·78&amp;1
3·11 I mo pd .

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

auto. trans .. a.c., cruise
con•rol, arh-fm radio with

electrical needs. Repairs,

Two trailers lor rent, fur·
nlshed , air conditioning,
cable tv. 773·5651 .

• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows

vice for Rac ine-Syracuse
sewer district. Dozer work

949·2801 . No Sunday calls.

3·29·3 mo

J&amp;C
SANITATION

e Small Carpenter Jobs
Qa rrell Brewer

COMPLETE sever in · I
stallatlon &amp; backhoe ser· 1

for older man or woman.

Closed Thurs.

"Specializing In
Re-Roofing"

1

83 .

2 bedroom house In country

Weds.· Fri. 9·7
Sat. 9·5

1980ine
TRANSAM.
Cheap.
301 1'-:=========t:=========i:===== ====eng
with turbo
cht!rge,

PI um bl ng
&amp; Healint
wATER
wELLs .
Domesti c and commercial,
pump sales and service.
Tom Lew is Drilling .
seasonal discount on pum

3 bedroom house in
Pomeroy. 1175. month, SlOO
deposit. You pay utilities.
'192·6384.

CYCLES

ROOFING

• Storm Doors

82

41
Houses lor Rent
3 bedroom house, Tuppers
Plains, l'h acres. $275.
month rent. $200. deposit.
pay own utilities. 667·6416.

DUMP TRUCK
Ph. 992-7201
3 51 mo.

10 1 ttc

1·7·tlc

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

1990 Plymouth Horizon ,
take over payments. 9'12·
3625.

• Backhoe
eExcavating
• Septic Systems
• Water, Sewer &amp; Gas
Ltnes
Ltcensed &amp; Bonded

992·5682

INSULATION

1955 CHEVY exc . COnd. 400
Chevy engine. 350 turbo
hydrami c trans. 667·3333.

ENTERPRISES

S1imson Ave. Athens,
Hours ;
Mon .-Tues. 9·4

9 A.M.·S 30 P.M.

J&amp;L BUMN
'4

J&amp;F

AlHENS SPORT

Hrs. : Mon.· Frt .

elnsulation

•extured

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES
INC.

MOBILE HOME lor rent.
Completely furnished.
Adults preferred. Deposit.
m -2749. •

Ph. 367-7560

speed, p s., p b , am ·fm, 8
track, less than 7,000 miles

895·3641.
ps. 1·304-895·3802 or

11•

-Auto and Truck,
Repair
·
-Transmission
Repair

water -Sewer·E lec1rtc
Gas Ltne-Ditches
water Lme Hook· ups
SeptiC Tanks
county Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshtre, Oh.

estimates. 367·7784 or 367·
7160.

992-2259

patio,

GARAGE

Co1 y Paont ing . ) , - - - - - - - - - ,
Resident ial, commerc ial ,
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
i nter ior,
exterior .
SIDING
Specia li zing in Interior
painting, paper hanging &amp;

POMEROY, 0.

storage building In good

TRENatiNG
SERVICE

Used R 40 Ditch Witch
Trencher. 1·614·694-7842.

2211
French

llOE . ~ainSt.

rooms, carpet,

ROGER HYSELL'S

chquard . 992·6309 or 742·

l&lt;omeroy, Ohio
992-7034

NEW LISTING - Tup·
pers Plains, nice ranch
type home with 3 bed·

Caii742-319S
or 992-7680
2·8 ti c

REESE~

2245

71
Autos lor Sate
1978 Z28 Camaro, 350

Let George Mtller check
your present electrical
system.
Residential
&amp; Commercia I

2 4 lt c

coin collections. Call 614·
767 ·3167 or 557·3411. .

For Larger Sizes

Plus Fluid.

SERVICE.

949·2862
949·2160

9'12·3150..

Wanted to Rent

*14 Hour Wrecker
Service
*Triple AAllilia.led.

For all of your wiring needs.

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices ,
•ca n Howard

TRAILER spaces for rent.
Southern Valley Mobile
Home Park, Cheshore, Oh.
9'12·3954.
Campsites for ren t on
sceni c riverbank . Utilities
paid Small trailers only

LEO MORRIS
Rl . 1 Side Hill Rd .
Rutland, 0~.

Mlu.ER ELECTRIC

All types ot roof work ,
new or repo:nr gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cleanmg and pa1nting .
All work guaranteed .

call 742·2S41 . Six roo'ln tarmhouse with 2676.
bath and double garage on
one acre and one hall of 45
Furnished Rooms
ground
.
Located
on
Rt
.
7
at
"--'==
==="-'-Real Estate-General
Five Points. $41 ,500.00. Sleeping rooms; by the 6T Farm Equipment
Alsoanacreandonehaltof week . K i t.chen, and Kuker 400 ga l. spray; tnt.
ground located near the television lounge . Carryout 540, 4xl6" plows; M.F. 13.5'
Housing
fairgrounds. $4000.00. 992· store and restaurant With in Disc • fer t . auger; 1 set
500 teet. 992-6370.
snap an 15.5x38 dual tires ;
Headquarters 2571.
N.H. 367 Manure Spreder,
Dunham
14' Harogator;
Private
sleeping
rooms,
l2
·Mobile Homes
with cooking fac ilities, air Int. traclor, 986. 304-675·

.
T

•S225.00 Parts &amp; Labor

9

BTU, 5,000 BTU . like new.
9'12·3791

:::=;;=:::::;:::::;=::;=:::::::==

All Models

~~~~~~~:'l.t:=========i=======2==1f=c=-~======4=·6:·1:m:o::

persona11zed free .
2 air conditioners. 6,000

, _.

Cars.

Available

Father's Day . Many ite.ms

No children. furnished. 992-

formation
Mld$20's .

sun porch, bll!sement.

-

'
i•v

77 FREE

~eAo Vocalist looking lor

0

In Langsville area, two
bedroom home on 1 and one
eights acres . Newly
remodeled with cellar with

bUilding

3204th St., Racine, Oh.
PH . 949-2777
• Complete A,uto and

Pomeroy.

near Memory Gardens. 2'h 3..1-- -H-om- e·,· tors-0 -10-- .. _ __ . _ ... _ . _
acres. Terms. 9'12-7741 .

Fo·r

ARD

U.F.O kites. 216E. 2nd St.,

Estate

bedroom home on S. R. 7

garage.

2

shaped

ts, basket
. Log
Gill
Shop.fillers
2 miles
Chester on rrght. Thurs.,
Fri., Sat. 10·3, Also have
gifts lor Mother 's Day &amp;

31
Homes lor Sale
PRIVATE setting ,

overhead

pear

THE EASTER
been here. Left

.

Business Services

diamond. Appraised at approximately $12,000. will
sell lor S7.000.' toritact Mr.
c . Bond, 9f1·241&gt;0.

M.

Real

, Misc. Merchani5e

APPROXIMATELY

oo ___ _

sell
own
lull
742·

POSt T IDN open lor
Registered Nurse. Prefer
the applicant to have from
three to' live years In·
dustrlal experience as a
nurse. Excellent salary
and alllrlnge benefits peld
for by the ComtNlnY. We
are an equal opportunity
employer. Please mall
ruume to Personnel
Manager, P.O. Box 218,
New Haven, West Vlrolnla
25265.

Someone to do
tNlperlng . 992·5196.

'

silver

PARTS for fr ick sawmill .
Atso want older model
Maylag copper tub
washing machine . 667·37611
or 667·6515.
'

pr~_:~posal. "

event more than f ifty
thousand dollars, or a bond
for ten percent of his bid,

•iamonds,

money and coins. Marlin's
General Store, Middleport.
992·6370.

RACINE GUN SHOOT,
Racine
Gun Club, every
the bid proposal."
· Fr iday night
starting at·
" The date set for com
pletion of this work shall be 7:30 p.m. Factory choke
set forth in the bidding guns only .

cw

'·"

.

..

...

subm il bids in · respanse to
th is 1nvitation and w i ll no I
be discrimin ated agams I
on the grounds of rac e
color, or nal ional ongtn in
an
consid erat ion for
award
" Min imum wage rates
for thi s project hq ve been
predeterm ined as requ ired
by law and are set fort h in

New, used, and antique fur ·
to small. Will buy one piece
or complete househOlds .
~.'~~~s General Store ,at

~aEem~ ·:

atlorded lul l opportun ity to

IRON AND BRASS BEDS
Old furniture, desks, gold
rings, jewe lr-y, sliver
dollars, sterling, etc. Wood
Ice boxes, jars, antiques,
etc. complete households.
Write : M.D. Miller, Rl . 4,
Pomeroy, OH 45769. Or
call m -77611.
niture. No item to large or

advertisement, minorit y
business enterpr ises wil l be

NOTICE
Offers will be received by
9- Wanted1o8uy
•MERCHANDISE
the undersigned al his of·
e EMPLOYMENT
J1 - How5thold Gtods
lice In Bank Dne Building
SERVICES
51- CI, TV , RadiO Equ ipment
In Pomeroy, Ohio, until the
11_ Helpw1 ntH
Virginia, filed ir) this Court
U- Antlquts
lOth day of April, 1981, at
11- SIWaiH wantec
an authenticated copy of 10 :00 o'clock A.M., for the
54- MIJC , Mtrch~ndlst
IJ- 1n1unnu
the letters of lhei( appinl· ~urchase of the following
U- lu lldlnt Suppllu
lf - Bwltntn Tninlnt
ment granted to them by described real estate of
Jt- P•h for h it
•mprovements
in
:
15- Scttooli Instruction
the County Commission of Roger Adams, deceased :
" ltlclio, TV
Wood County, West
eFARM SUPPLIES
Tractl : Being a .88 acre
M~~i~SRC~~~!rJl .~-1~:1.orl Virginia
&amp; Cl Repair
. All creditors of
of real estate situated
&amp;
LIVESTOCK
11- Winltd To Oo
- State Route 124, by spot such decedent must file . tract
• •- F~rm l!.qYipm~~nt
resurfaci ng with asphalt their claims to this Court In Marion T9wnshlp •
eFINANCIAL
u-w~ntH to •wy
concre1e.
within six months alter the ~~:,~':?on cs~~YRou?eh~~ '
12- Tr utka lor hit
J 1fi.Ualneu
Pavement Width
date of such filing , or their ~pproxlmalely 2 mlles'
U - LIVUIOd:
Opportynifr
Varies.
claims will be forever
Of Logan, Dhio. 1
~- H•~ I Gr1in
U - Money to LOiln
Project and Work Length barred as a possible lien East
Tract
2: An undivided
u - hed &amp; Ftflillrt r
1l- P r oltUtono~l
- 4~7781eet or 8.67 miles .
upon the Ohio real estate of one·hall lnter~st in 61
•
SfrYtUS
" 1 he date set lor com· such decedent .
acres, more or less
•TRANSPORTATION
pletlon of this work shall be
Robert E. Buck situated In Fraction 25 and'
e REAL ESTATE
71- AUtO\ fOr hll
as s~t forth In the bidding •
Fraction 7 of 'Bedford
prQpOsal .''
7l- Vanii4W .O
(3 ) 30, 14) 6, 13, 31c J,udge Township,
J I- Homtilor 51111
Meigs County,
74 - Motlf'C:VCIU
Each bidder shall be
J1- Moeilt.ttomts
Ohio.
required to file with his bid
lor Salt
a - ~uto Parlt
Publl N0 11
Tract 3: An undivided
a certified chec k or
ll- Fo~rm1 lor Satt
&amp; Ac ctnorlt~
c
ct
one·hall Interest In 56
cashier's check for an
71 - Auto Rtptlr
J4- luslntu lulldlntl
NOTICE TO
acres, more or less,
amount equal to live per
JS- LotJ &amp; AC:rtlfl
CONTRACTORS
·situated
In Lebanon Town·
of
his
bid,
but
In
no
cent
U - Rnl Ett~tt WI niH
STATE
OF
OHIO
ship,
Meigs
County, Ohio,
event more than filth
31- lil t •Uon
.SERVICES
DEPARTMENT
OF
described
In
Volume 238,
. thousand dollars, or a bond
TRANSPOR'I'ATION
Pall'! 815, Meigs County
11 - Homtlmprovtmtnt•
lor
ton
per
cent
of
his
bid,
Columbus, Ohio
Deed Records.
.
U - Plumltintl IIUVItlnt
Want·Ad Advertising
payable to the Director ·
Mlrch20,1911
Tract 4: Being 91.76
IJ- IIICIYallrt~
Deadlines
Bidders
must
apply;
on
·
Sa los
acres. more or less, In Sut·
14- l ltc:trlc:tl
the proper forms, tor ContractL...
t Copy
ton Township, Meigs coun·
&amp; Rtfrlttratlon
2: 30P .M. Oatly
quallfocallon
'
a
t
least
ten
No. I HOI
ly, Ohio, described in
. U --Gtntrtl Mtut lnt
12 NoOn Slt\lrelr,
the
dale
set
days
prior
.to
UNIT PRICE
Volume 243, ' Pall'! 1029,
11-M, H. llt!N ir·
torMondty
for pening bids In ac·
CONTRACT
MtiOS
County Deeil Recor·
, 11- UphOIIftry
, I
cordance with Chapter 5525
I
FRI
-ot11R(6S)
ds.
Ohio Revised Code.
FR ...R!U/
Tract J: Loll 3, ~.5. 6, 8,
Pions and speclllcallons
end 9 sltvaltd In Mayer's
are
file In the l;&gt;epart· • Se aledSR-otiORUS
will be Addition to tile Vllllll'! of
· Rates and OtHer lnformatjon
Transportation and rocelvtd alprQPSals
flit Office Of the Racine, Mtlgs County,
I of the District Director
ot the D~to Dt~~er· Ohio, delcrlbtcl In the
fJWortur UIUitr
tment of TreiiiPCJrtllflon · follOwing deeds: Volume
C1111
CIIJtft
reserves · ColumbUs. Ohio, untlt10:00 ~67, Pta.721; Volume 267,
I.M
t .U
any and AT.M., Ohio Stantlerd Time,
191 143; Volume 257,
l dt¥1
llftday,
April
21,
1911,
lor
eoe 901; Vo ume 247,
lillY I
DAVID L. WEIR ImPt'ovetnenll In :
Ul
729, Meigs County
ldlyl
I.M
UJ
DIRECTOR
Atht'111, G~llla, Hocking,
Rtctitdl.
Rev. 8·17-73
Meigs, ManrOI ~n
ht rlaltt 11 r_,vtd to
Itch word D~tr lite mlrtlmum 11 wtrhlt 4 Clftb Nr wfl'i ,., .. ,.,
•
Nobile, Vinfon Jind re)tcllnyrcllblds.
ACII runnlnt other thin ctnaecwflvt ityt will II cfltrtM 11 tht I fiV
I4) 6, 13, 21c
Wash ngton Cot.lntles, Ohio,
erd v. Futlt
n~
'
on varlouslocatlons,~by ap·
xecutor of tile
.
Public Notice
~Yillll pelnt lor lane, cen·
Elfattol
In memory, Ctrd of , l'lffllt\ tM ~INtry , 'cM~ta,... wtnl. U .ll \
mlttl'"'""· Ctlflln lf~lflct .
~f..rid8'JL"!!·
RagerQicltm
PROiiATI COURT
... o.
MMI .. Htftll llttllfNI Y.'triiiY ... art ICC.,IHI only wttt CIP WIM
OI'MIIGS
not
111 Ill b
II
PUilifh'IW ,. "'
Of'fer. JJ Clftl cNrtt - -Ill Clrrylq lo• Nt.~nttf• 1ft Ctrl If Tflt
11
w
1
Irma
lvalv
t1IUI'e
M
0
ltnflfltl.
c~1Tl•~'
tllet n lilY corlfrect 4!n·
J.I..-- - - - - - - - ' - ' - -- ----:--~1
APPOINTMINT
· lereclinto Plll'11Hlnt to 11111 (4) 6, 7, 1, 9, .etc

...,

'
Wanted to Buy
WANTED TO BUY:
GOLD,
,sILVER ,
PLATINUM, STER.!-ING·
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR ·
Y, MISC. ITEMS. AB ·
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED. ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT ,
mtio 9'12·Jol76.

-

S4

.almond
Hot
'Point
refngerator. 992.-7.501.

Yard Sale

YARD SALE. 3 family on
4510 Eagle Ridge Rd.
Tues.·Sat. 9·5.

Current ,

Balances and

Wrrghi

I' ' year old white Admiral
15' refrigerator. New 13 .6

LARGE 41amlly yard sale:
starting Mon . 6 1111 11, 9-4.
i do all types of car·
corner Hamilton &amp; Second, penter work . Experienced
Middleport. Sheets, and responsible. No job to
spreads, .bl~nkets, toys,
or to small. Phone 992·
clothes, tires, loots. Rain
anvtime.
cancels. . ·

- Busrness
716.86
- c entra l
938.00
J an. I, 1980
69,518.78 Total All General
School Foundation
Fund Exp. and
(gross) Basic A llowTransfers
233,774 11
ance
222.978 .09 Tota l Exp. and
Total Recenue
Transfers Plus Sal ,
Rece ipts
222.978.09
Dec. 31 , 1980 297,289.09
Rece tpts - Non
SCHEDULE 13
Revenue
.00
COMBINED STATE
Total Non Revenue
OF ASSETS AND
Receipts plus Revenue
LIABILITIES
Receipts
222, 978.09 ASS ETS:

4,792 20 Total Beginning

by Ldr

Yard Sale: April 4·11 from
9:30 to 6:00 at the corner of Furnace repairs, electrical
4th end Bridgeman Streets
plumbing, mobole
In Syr~cuse.
or residence 992·

Public Notice

1.581 67

WANT AD INFORMATION

I
I Pr int one word in eac h
I space below . Eac h init ia l or group of fig ures
I counts
a word . Cou nt
I name as
and address or
I phone number If used. Words
I You' ll get better resul ts -+-~~~~~~~~!
I tf you descr ibe full y,
ve pnce. The Se nti nel
I gireser
ves th e rt ght to
I class if y, edit or reject
I any ad 'You r ad w ill be
I put i n the pr oper
f icat1on if you ' ll
I clas1
check
I below the proper box
These cash r ates
incl ude discoun1
I
I
I
) Wanted
) For Sa le
'I
17. _ _ _ _ _ __
) Announcemenl
I
18 _ _ _ _ _ __
) For Rent
I
19. _ _ _ __ __
I
20._ _ _ _ __
21. _ _ _ _ __ _
I
I
22. _ _ _ __ __
I I. _ _ _ _ __
23. _ _ _ __ _
I 2. _ _ _ _ __ 24. _ _ __ _ __
I 3. _ __ _ __ 25. _ __ _ _ _
I 4 . _ __ _ __:·-,_ 26._ _ _ __ _
I 5. _ _ _ __ _

I
I
I
I
1
I

292, 496.87
230,563.58

Less
Encu mbrances

I Phone __________________

1 lo. _ _ _ __ _

69,518 78

222.978 09

31 , 1980

1 Name--------1 Address _ _ _ _ _ _ __

27.
--_--'--28._-_
___;_
29·. _ _ _ _ _ __
30._ _ _ _ __ _
31. _ _ _ __ _ _

31. 1980

Bal ance December

Wri t e your own ad and order by mad with This
coupon. Cance l you r ad by phone w .en you get
r esu lts . Money not retu ndable

- -__
- - -_
-' -1I 6.
7. _
_
_
I a._ _ _ _ __
I 9. _ _ _ __ _

Bal ance Dece mber

(General Fund
Summary ot
Balances, Rece1pt s
and Expenditures
Balance, Janu ar y 2,

Kll 'N &lt;.AHI Yl

li cense' Phone

= =::::::w,...a-n.,.
ted
-:-:to

Public Notice

SCHEDULE li ·A

Edu c.atton

SCHEDUL E I

--------··--- -lnsuran(e
-----

13

OP&lt;~raror· s

7

The Daily

Ohio

LOST: ~ear Portland, 2 AUTOMOBILE
IN
female fox hounds, 1 wh~e. SU RANC·E been can
1 brown &amp; white 8.0·2354 1 celled? Lost vour

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
Public Notice

1981

GAWA
REFRIGERATION
INC.
Rheem, Amana
&amp; Carrier

AIR CONDITIONERS
&amp; HEAT PUMPS
Ph. 614-992-70JI
3·11-1 mo.

SALE
20%-30%

ALL f.AIE

D£CORAnNG

Electrlcll

SUPPLiES

&amp; Rlfrlprellon

EL.WOOD
BOWERS
MACHINE
REPAIR - Sw"pers,
service, all
toasters, irons, till smell
992·2114 . The
Shop, .' Pomeroy .
appllancn. Lawn - ·
Next to state HighWay Aui-IJtd Singer Sales
Geraoe an Rqute 7, 985we Sharpen
3125.
e,\

I ,

'

ANN'S CAKE
DECORATING

SUPPLIII . .
Osbon! Rd.

RHCI,svllle! 011.

�• •

Ohio

'

At~a
·Ueaths
.
i

·-

·~

'

Former· plant. official dies

"·

· Julia L. Grim

the fonner Madge Romine who
preceded him in death on Nov. 20,
1964. He was also preCeded in death
by six brothers, lllfO sisters' and
several great-grandchildren.
Mr. pey was a retired coal
miner and was a member of the
Hysell Run Free Methodist Church
for :lb years and was the oldest member of that church.
Surviving are thrl!f sons, William
L., Dayton; J. Manij.n, Grove City;
Larry, Roseville; fqur daughters,
Mrs. Ed (Bernice) Nelson, Rutland;
Mrs. Edward (Dorothy) Archer,
Roseville; Mrs. Pauline Tillis, Route
I, Rutland, and Mrs. Sherman
(Kathl~!!!n) .Tillis, Rutland; 24 grandchildren, ~ great-grandchildren
and nine gr,eat-great.grandchildren.
Funeral services Will b\! held at 2
p.m. Tuesday at ·th~ Hysell Run
Holiness Church with the Rev. Cecil
Wise and the Rev. Tbe(On Durham
officiating. Burial will' be in Miles.
Cemetery, Rut!aru!; ~riends may
call at the Walker ~ral Home in
Rutland anytime after 2 p.m. Monday untill2 noon Tuesday when the
body willbe taken to the church. The
fainily .w.ill receive friends fr&lt;rn 2 to
4 and 1'to 9 p.m. Monday.

Julia L. Grim, 84, died Mo-'nday
morning at the Pomeroy )lealth
Care Center following a lingering
. Illness.
Bliln Nov. 2, 1896 at Ceredo, W.
· Va., she wu a daughter Of the late
John E. and Anna Wills Lyoil5 . .Mrs.
Grim wu also preceded in d,eath by
ber husband, Raymond 0.• Grim,
three brothers and a sister.
Surviving are a sister and.brother·
liHaw, Atlona and Pete, Quick,
Tulsa, Okla; a sister·in·law, Anna
Grim, Pomeroy and several nieces
and nephews.
The Rev. Mark McClung will of·
ficiate at funeral serviceS which are
being arranged by the RawlingsCoat&amp;-Blower Funeral Home in Mid·
dleport.

'

William M. Haley
William M. Haley, IJl, Route I, :

Rutland, died Saturday at Veterans.
Memorial Hospital following a
lengthy illness.
Mr. Haley was born Nov. 15, 1893
in Meigs County, a son of the late ·
Jolul L. and Julia Spires Haley. He
was married in'!1910 in Pomeroy to

•

Meigs County happenings..
Revival hegins tonight
A r.evival will begin this evening
and will ~ntinue through Aprill2, at
the Chester Church of the Nazarene
with the' Rev. Norman Taylor of
Evans, W.Va., as the guest speaker.
Services will be held at 7: 30 p.m.
nlghly. There will be special singing
each evening. Pastor Herbert Grate
invites the public to attend.

Marriage license
A marriage license was issued to
Timothy Wayne Chaffee , 21 ,
Pomeroy, and Marlene Denise Hein,
17, Rt.l , Minersville.

To end marriages
Linda VanMeter, Rt. 2, Pomeroy,
and Charles VanMeter, Middleport,
filed for diBsolution of marriage in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
Ruth Dailey was granted a divorce
from Ronnie Dailey and the
marriages of Kimali Jean Hysell
and Randy Joseph Hysell, Stephen
Bruce Halley and Lisa Renee
Halley, David Reeves, and Luetta
Ann Reeves, and Judy C. Musser
and Charles A. Musser were
diBsolved.

Saturday Discharge.&lt;~-Robert. Riffle, Peggy Barrett, Wilbur Hanning.
Sunday Admissions-Michael Epple, Pomeroy; Eva Shaffer, Racine.
Sunday Discharges--Olan Hysell,
Edson Hart, Beatrice Blake. '

Noon luncheon
President Jim Frecl&lt;er announces
that a regular meeting of the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce
will be held at noon Tuesday at the
Meigs Inn. Speaker for the meeting
will be E. Joyce Miller of the Meigs
County Hwnane Society. All mem·
bers are asked to attend.

No emergency calls
Local emergency units were
without any calls on Sunday-an
unusual day-the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services reports. At Saturday morning, the Middleport Unit took Brenda Snyder
fr om Middleport to Veterans
Mernori,ai Hospital.

Saturday Admissions-Anna Hart,
Pomeroy ; Maude Van Meter, Clif·
ton.

Haig.. ,
(Continued from page I J
and that his own trip to the·Middle
East may also be a cause. He did mt
elaborate.
·
·
•
Haig due to leave for Jordan later
today, after a second round of talks
with Prime Minister Menachem
Begin.
In talks Sunday the two men
agreed that top priority should be
given to reaching a cease-fire in
Lebanon, aides to th~ Israeli prime
minister said.
Haig also told reporters Sunday
that the Soviet threat to Poland is
growing steadily more ominous and
the .United States is following the
situation on a "minute by minute"
basis. But he indicated today the he
didn't think Soviet intervention in
Poland was imminent.
On Sunday, he said Soviet
President Leonid I. Brezhnev's
decision to attend the meeting of the
CZechoslovak Collll'llUnist Party in
Prague today may mean it is "an
important occasion with respect to
Soviet action affecting the Polish
situation."

stayed until. his retirement October
Other survivors Include his wife,
1, 1979.
. Jean MUsie Warner, 'l'rith whom 1~
A graduate of Dunbar High recently (March I) celebrated their
School after tilt
be attended 40th wedding anniversary. Also llllr.
. WestVirginiaUniversityandrecelv- viving are one son, David Michael
ed a as ~ in mechanical Warner, of Richmond, Virginia; ~
engineering.
a daughter, SuaanBeth Newlllllle,.
WarnerisamemberoftheTrinity Pomt Plea&amp;a~~t; two slsters, Mrs,
United "Methodist Church In Point Ray (Enuna) Stepbena, of Nitro,
Pleasant, the local Pat Wilson ·and Mra. Frank (Ponna) Kelly, of
Shrine Club, Point Pleasant . El~or; one bt!oti)er · Gay N.
Morgantown Union Lodge No. 4, ~ W~er, of Nitro, and four grandcient, Free Jind Accepted Masons, children, David IJ, Natalie, and Tif.
the Beni Kedem Telnple, fany Warner of ·Richmond, an&lt;!
Charleston, and the Scottish Rite of Shawn Newsome of Point P\eaaant..
Freemasonry. He was also a
Funeral services will be •held at
member of the Ohio Power Com- Trinity United Methodist Churcb;
pany Veteran Employees Associa- Point ~leaaant, at 2:00PM, Tue&amp;lion and he wu a former member of day, wtth the Rev. Tally Hanna and
the Point Pleasant Rotary Club, Rev. Paul~ettofflciating, Wl!ler
where he sei!Ved at one time as the direction rJ. the Wllcoxe'!
president. \ ·
Fun~ral Homer Friends wW be
He was born October 11, 1917, in received at the funeral home from
PUtnam County, a son of .Verdia 5:00 PM t~ 9:00 PM Monday even,
Margaret Barnett warner, who sur- mg, andfnends.maycall at 1:00 ~
vives in Eleanor, W.Va., and Carl A. at the church p~ortotheservice.
Warner, who preceded him in death
lntennent will foll~ in Kirkland
in 1971. He was also prl!Ceded in Memorial Gardeii!J with Masonic
death by an infant brother.
graveside rites by Milum Lodge ·

war

ELBERFELDS FOR BRACH'S EASTER CANDY

Aprtl&amp;, 1111

CAITLE PRJCES :

Feedor Steers: (Good and Choicei :JOO.OGOII,..
500-700ibo. 53 . 7~ .
Feeder Heifer11 : (Good.andCbok·ej ~ lbl!l.
57.foH6 ; 500-700 ibo. 53-$9.50.
Feeder Bulb: !Good •nd Choice ) lbo.
61.50&lt;19; 500-700 ibo. 51.50-6:1.25.
SiaU(hterBulli! : lOver l,lmlbo.) ~1.70.
SlaU~ht.r Cows: Utillties U.SS-46.50; CaMeDCutten %9.00-43.

AURORA, Ind. (AP) - An Ohio
woman and her !~year-old son apparenUy drowned when their car

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

~~~~~==~~~~===~;;================

cross
an away
Indiana
creek,
was swept
as they
tried toa 11spokesman for the state Department
of Natural Resources said.
Joan Gaddis, 35, and her son
William, both of Hamilton, Ohio;
drowned Saturday when Mrs. Gaddis tried to cross Hartford Fork of
Laughery Creek in her car, the
spokesman said.

·W
. ere
Holding
Down
Prices
Good
11 .

SpringerC.ws: IBytheHead)m-465.
CowandC.UPain: {BytheUIIil)~.
VeaLs : f Choice .and Prime) IJ..97 .50.
Baby C.iv"' ' IBy the He&amp;d/56-110.
HOG PRICES:
Hogs : (No. 1, Barrowa and Gilla ) II)0.2311 ibo.

39.611411.

l;kllcher Sows 32. ~.40 .
Butcher Boart ~. 75.
Feeder Pi!" (By the Headill&gt;43.
SPEEP PRICES:
Slaughter Limbo-·

12

Communit~·

Owned Bank

PHONE: 992-2635

Candies - Excellent Selection.

1-LB. ECKRICH

FRANKIES

Your

INGELS FURNITURE
·AND
JEWELRY
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .

Stop In - Select Yo~r EasteJ Candy Now.
Baskets • Boxes • and Cellophane Bagged

•

•

'

ON THE 1st FLOOR

April '&amp;-April

Farmers .
·sank

••..

.,,

.OPEN FRIDAY·'TIL 8

Seek drowning victims

If you are planning on
•
doing some home tm·
provements,
the
.
..
Farmers Bank is making
home improvement
loans.

·.-

,06 NORTH 2ND AVENUE

Alhrall.Jvetkld Sate

Albuy, OIIH

•

SUPPLEMENT TO DAILY SENTINEL

Mar.ket report ----~----------62.~. 7; ;

Veterans Memorial

Ralph E. Warner, 63, . Sandy
Heights, Pollit Pleasant, died Saturday evening in Holzer Medical
Center.
Warner, a retired production
engineer with the Arrierican Electric
Power Service Corporation, was a
fonner assistant plant manager at
the Philip Sporn Plant, New Haven.
· A registered professional
mechanical engineer, he was a
fonner member of the Arrierican
Association for Mechanical
Engineers and of the West Virginia
Society of Professional Engineers.
Active in civic organizations; he
led a Mason City Boy Scout troop for
several years as well as holding
other scouting positions. He also
served as town .engineer of Mason
City approximately seven years.
A native of Liberty, WV, Warner
joined he AEP system in 1949 as an
engineer trainee at the Sporn Plant.
·In his career he worked as an
engineer at several power plants
along the Ohio River. He was
transferred January, 1979, to AEP
offices in Canton, Ohio, where he

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