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'

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NEW YORK (AP) - Federal
authorities were searching today for
any possible connection between accused presidential assailant John W.
Hinckley Jr. and a man arrested
here with a loaded pistol who
allegedly threatened to "bring to
completion Hinckley's reality."
Officials said there was no evidence of any Conspiracy between Hinckley, accused of wounding
President Reagan and three other
men last week, and Edward M.
Richardson, who allegedly told officials who arrested him at a bus
station Tuesday that he. was on his
way to Washington to kill Reagan or
other high officials.
Howe'Ver, the Daily News quoted
sources as saying the Secret Service
was investigating reports lhe two
may once have been roommates.
And according to officials, there
were similarities between Hinckley
and Richardson, who was orrP•IPrl

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CHARGED WITH 111REATING REAGAN'S LIFE
-Edward Miebael Ricbanlsoo, left, aeated In car with
liDidentlfled federal ageat, arrives at the Maabatlall
ComcdOOII FacWty Tuelday. Tbe ZZ.year-old Penuy!VIIIIa mu wu arrested In New York's Port

Aulhorlly Bul TermlDal and charged with lhreaten!Dg
the life of PrelldeDI ReagaD, accordlug lo the Secret
Service. Ricbanlaoa wu armed with a loaded .3%
caii!M!r revolver, wben be wu arrested, the Setret Sel'vlce aald. (.U: Luerpbolo I.

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Cushioned for comfort in action. ·
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Lightweight c leated sole.
youths' ond men's sizes.
~

Hoffman gets seven y~ars
NEW YORK - Abbie Hoffman, the poUtical activist and former
Yippie who surrendered l88t September after nearly seven years underground, wu sentenced Tuesday to three years in prison for a 1973
cocaine sale. He must serve at least one year before becoming eligible
for parole.. ~ _ _
·In a hushed 'Manhattan courtroom packed with Hoffman's supporters, Acting State Supreme Court Justice Breoda Soloff said the
graying 43-yeaNld Hoffman "knowngly, willingly and deliberately"
,sold the narcotic Aug. 28, 1973; and jumped $10,000 ball a year later.

Bloody battle became factor
LAS CRUCES, N.M. - Inmates' fear of prosecution for the bloody
February 19110 riot at the New Mexico State Penitentiary apparently
was a factor iq this week's fatal stabbing of a prisoner, the state
corrections secfkary says.
·
Jesus Jose An1Ulle2, 29, who faced a ftrst=degree murder charge
stemming from the February uprising, was stabbed to death Monday
at lhe prison . No charges were filed inun~tely ag• two suspects.

Unusual accident causes death
CINCINNATI- The crash of a Lear jet that took the Ufe of a Kansas
man occurred after a duck fiew into the windshield, officiala say. .
Co-pilot Kent Woodworth, 35, of Wichita, Kan., died Tuesday when
the jet crashed on take off from Lunken Field, a general aviaUon
facWty on the eastern edge of Cincinnati, according to police.
The pQot of the plane, 23-yeaHld Jiln Grieshaber of Harper Woods,
Mich., was In good condition at a hoepital where he was being treated
for cuts to both anna, officills said. ·

Man c6nf~sses to nine ki11ings
DAJJ.AS - A 42-year-old man with a history of mentallllneu hu

told pollee he W8l responsible for nine killings In Tew, California,
Wyamlng and Nevada- including several women whose deaths were
blamed on,111tural causes, officiala say.
·
According to three conlu01111 entered as evidence Monday In the
1DIII'der trial bere of Caroll Edward Cole, the drifter told pOUce he
llrangled three Dallu women Jut November, allegedly after they
made semalldviiiCell to him.
He lalltallding trial on 1charges stemming from the deaths of thole
three wcmen. His attorneys say they plan to argue Cole wulnsane at
the lime of the killings.

.Astronauts begin exercises
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - Alti'Onauta John YoUng and Robert
Crippen, "ready to do the job," were flylnc here ~ to bejpn their
llanciHite ~ with I . villi to Columbia, the 1llllellted nrttie
they'll fl)' imolpll.'e Friday.
Followlnl a lq breU: for repairl, the eouDtdolm wu baek on
......1.. today iod I apokesman llid, "Evwytbinc !Jere Ia fi'OiDC
~."

.

Ia the IIICJrllinC, woduwlnltalled the aplollw ellarp. that would
del4nlte the lhuttle's filii &amp;IDk and boolter rocketlllboald tbey wmdlraff eoww ll1d tllnaten populated I1WII fGII~ llaneh.

Weather
ar.y wtlllllbcwa &amp; and lbundln&amp;ormllllrely tonlibliAiwlln the

DIIIICII Cloudy willa cbew allbo,lln 'lburlday. Hilblln tbe low
801. "w!M't-Gf pnelpttatiall II 1*- ....._ ll1d 10 per~ 'J'baro
11117. Wladla lAw I b lNiqlll.......,
I I 'IOMih _,_ rrtdiJllliOiltlbllllda7:PirtiJeloiii.J
. . . . 1111 plttad HtiM In tiii .. FriiiiJ. --*c to tile 'IllS..

diJ.I.ftllll 1111 ...

I .

•

•

By I,.\'!;IE CROW
The names of flve Meigs CounUans who will be honored at an
awards banquet were released at
Tuesday's hmcheon ineeting of the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce at
the Meigs Inn.
Honorees at II¥ awards banquet
will be Eleanor Robson, Thereon
Johnson, Frank W. Porter, C. E.
Blakeslee and Vic Wipple.
The banquet will be held at the
Pomeroy Senior Citizens Center
with Crow's Family Restaurant
catering the dinner.
Tickets to the event are $8 and
may be purchased at The Daily Sentinel, Athens Messenger, Elberfelds
and the Chamber office. Reservations must be made by April21.
It was also aMounced that there
will be a birthday celebration
honoring Fred Crow, former
pl'ellidenl of the chamber on May 31.
The event will be held at Royal
Oak Park with a cocktail hour from 5
p.m. to 6 p.m. and dinner to be served from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. Tickets to
the event to hOnor Crow are '10
each.
Joyce MIJ!er, vice president of the
Meigs County Hwnane Society, gave
· a brief history of the humane society
and pointed out various problelllB
lhatemt.
Two of the problems mentioned by
Miller were the over population of
dogs and cats and the poor conditions at the dog pound.
She noted that the boun at the dog
pound are inldequate, NIIIW)' conditions are poor and that 8lllmiJiat
the poun(l are cold In Winte and
wann in summer.
She ~ noted the method used in
destruction of animals was
questlonsble.
One of lhe soluti01111 1o the doc
situation Ia the sale of Uce~~~e~ for '
dogs. This year 3,143 single ~
were sold and 1,000 kennel llcenses.She added thaI the dog
population in the county Ia ap(JI'OIImltely 11,000 with lnmdredl
belnC dellroyed.
Funcllng of the hwnlne solcety Ia
financed by membenhip, contrlbutlona, and operaUon ~ the
Thrift Sbop In Mlddleporl, Miller ~
eerved. She allo added that the
IOCiety hu t.BI operating ln •the
red.
In clOIInc, Miller llid tbe goall of
the lullllll eodety are to obtain
adequate lhelten for dop and call.

eltend an eclucadonal

after authorities were tipped off by a
maid who found a threatening note
in a hotel room.
- Richardson apparently shared
Hinckley's affection for teen-age actress Jodie Foster.
- Richardson recently occupied a
room in the same New Haven,
Conn., hotel where Hinckley stayed
earlier. The hotel was near the campus of Yale University, where Miss
Foster is a student.
- Richardson spent several months living with his sisters in
Lakewood, Colo., 20 miles from Hinckley's home in Evergreen. Hinckley later stayed in a motel three
miles from Richardson's sisters'
home in Lakewood.
Richardson, 22 , of the
Philadelphia suburb of Drexel Hill,
also allegedly told authorities he
was responsible for recent phone
calls and letters threateriing Miss

Gary Wolfe, special investigator
for the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department, today issued what he
reports is a series of · articles
designed to "make the citizens of
Meigs County award of what is
•going on' with their tax doilars".
The first article deals with Meigs
County Auditor Howard Frank who
made a brief comment in response
this morning.
"We have jU8t completed an
examination by state auditors who
found all functions of the county
auditor's office in good condition and
the county goverrunent stable",
Auditor Frank said.
Wolfe's article concerning
Frank's office states:

"Since every story needs an interesting beginning, for two reasons
I have chosen the Meigs County
Auditor's Office.
"Reason One: Our auditor in his
wisdom for budget matters (according to the Ohio Revised Code, he
is one of the three people on the
Budget Conunitteel has stated that
the sheriff should close his office at
midnight each night. This, according to Frank, would be to lock
the office and the sheriff go upstairs
and go to bed. If a citizen calls for
the sherif, then the sheriff is to get
out of bed, have his wife get out of
bed, and have her answer radio traffic, while he, the sheriff, goes to the
citizen's house to help him.

According to Mr. Frank, the
sheriff could lay off two deputies by
following this routine. Again, Belcording to Mr. Frank, this particular
system was 'the way things were foc
previous sheriffs. Someone should
infonn Mr. Frank that some of the
former sheriffs didn't have radios in
their cars and some sheriffs had
only horses.
"Reason Two. Mr. Frank has
made the statement that the sheriff
has too many employes. Well, the 10
employes the sheriff has must not
only answer the phone, cook the
food , handle problems the citizens
have, protect their property,
vestigale their crimes, file the
(Continued on page 12)

ur

13-day strike takes violent tum
By Associated Press
The l:klay nationwide strike by
the United Mine Workers has taken
,a more violent turn, with shots fired
at a union organizer in West Virginia
and a fistfight breaking out in
Washington between UMW
President Sam Church arid his
safety director.
Church, a burly former miner with
a rough-and-tumble reputation, apparently got into the fight with
Safety Director Everett Acord on
the sidewalk outside union
headquarters over a Jetter In which
Acord criticized strike-prompted
layoffs at UMW headquarters.
Acord was one of 133 workers laid off
as of Aprll1S.
"I tried to hold my own," Acord
said. "But he's a.. .lot bigger than I
am." The fight lastell a few minutes
"until we coul~ 't fight anymore,"
he said.
Acord said the fight ended with an
hour-long discU&amp;'lion, but the differences weren't resolved. "I can no

longer support him as president of
the union."

Neither Church nor union
spokesman Eldon Callen could be
reached for comment.
State police In West Virginia,
meanwhile, recovered three bullets
fired through the window of a Huntington motel room where one of the
union's chief organizers was sitting.
Larry Young, who heads the union's
organizing efforts In the Southeast,
said he dived underneath a bed when
the shooting started Monday night
and counted four shots.
Young, who was not hurt,
speculated the shots were connected
with the union's effort to organize
coal-truck drivers In Kentucky, Ohio
and West Virginia.
In Kentucky's Harlan County, the
driver of a truck hauting non-union
coal wu Injured Tuesday when
union pickets hurled a rock through
the windshield of his truck. Ronald
Swinson Jr. was treated for eye and
facial injuries at a Harlan hospital,

authorities said.
In eastern Ohio, an afternoon
union rally in Bellaire ended after 40
people threw rockS and debris and
smashed windshields and front
grilles on three trucks carrying'nonUMW coal, according to U. Kenneth
Ayres of the Belmori County
Sheriff's Department. He said no injuries were reported and no arrests
were made.
The UMW's bargaining council is
to meet this Friday, apparently to
decide what the union's next move
should he in efforts to return to the
bargaining table.
Last week, the urtion's rank and
file rejected a tentative settlement
reached with the Bituminous Coal
Operators Association.
The proposal would have increased pay 36 percent In three
years. The chief complaint was the
proposed removal of a requirement
that coal companies pay royalties to
the union pension fund on non-union
coal they process.

(X'Illl'llll,

form an - pncJ III'Yice, redllce
the populaUon of dop and call and
iN 1'1pte cn.lt7 to
O•d1...... IIIUir Ilk!,"•n!mela

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·.' lblrl
..........
lbllr~
too." · · · - - 1111111
Pul 8lmaD . .IOIIIICIII llllt I
.......... will bebeld May 1 and
(CaiiiiP. . on pep 121
•
~

Foster·- Including a threat to blow
up her donnitory unless Hinckley
was released, said federal
prosecutor John Martin.
But Martin said there was "no
evidence to support speculation of a
conspiracy" between the two. The
Secret Service and one of Richardson's sisters said there was no indication they had met.
"I don't think at this time we see
any connection," said FBI
spokesmail Roger Young. "We're
checking into the possibility."
Richardson checked in at the New
Haven hotel and wrote the letter to
Miss Foster after the Reagan
shooting, authorities said.
Richardson was ordered held on
$500,000 bond pending an April 17
hearing to delennine if he will be
moved to Connecticut to face a
charge of threatening to kill the
president. If convicted, he could be
sent to prison for five years.

Investigator takes issue
with County Auditor Frank

·chamber
announces
honorees

sua ••·"
sua tt.t7
u.aa 14,97

1S cen.ts

A Multimedia Inc. New5paper

Federal agents
seek connection

24.88

""

2 sections. 16 Pages

I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, April8,1981

Our Reg. 29.96

Dept.

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Commentary

Pegt-2-Tilt Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, ~hlo
. Wtdnesdlr, April I, lfll

Prices

·

IsH~aprobkm?~---~--------~-~-~-~-·~~~k-~_J_~
Back to Haig. What are the grounds for discontent'
It was indeed tactless for him to
display before a congressional committee his displeasure with the

arrangement.'l, contrived by Mr.
Reagan's staff and ratified by
Reagan, on the question who would
be in charge in the event of a crisis.
Since it usually makes sense to
meditate alternative explanations to
those of narrow-mlndedness when
ewnining the motives of experienced, able men it would seem
fair to assume that General Haig instinctively thought of "crisis"
situations as those caused by international event.'l. The most obvious recent historical example is of
course the hostage seizure. Remenr
her that the president had spoken on
the telephone with his secretary of
sll;te the very morning the decision

had subsequently been released
identifying Vice President BUBb liS
chainnan of the crisis managemelt
team in the absence of the president
- and President Reagan had made
no mention of his forthcoming announcement. Haig had hardly had
time to assimilate the news when he
was as~ed about it by a
congressional corrunittee. He is
being criticized for having spoken
the exact truth to Congress. In answer to the question: Was he upset
by the president's arrangement.o;,
Haig'sans)¥erwas, ''Yes.''
What then are Haig's critics
saying : that a) he should not have
been upset' or b) that it was OK for
him to be upset, but be ought not to
have revealed this to the Congress
and, through it, to the public?
Certainly the. S!!Cond of these, and
probably also the first. ·

The Daily Sentinel
Ill f nu rt Str l:'t't
PIJffiH IIy, Oh lll

61 .. 992-2 150
I Jt . \ ltHJt TIJ THf I'TF.REST Of" Tilt~ Mf: IG.\j..,\tASUN AH EA .

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Puhlisher

PAT WHITEHEAD
"' ~is ta n t

BOB HOEFLICH

Puhlisht: r IC untr&lt;,Ut'r

DALE ROTHGEB. JR .
"'~" "' ~ F:rl itnr

A ~t f. M Rf.. R uf Tht• AssO('ia lt' d PrtH, Inl and Oaih Pr u~ Anodation and· the
Amrrk11n \' t"ll ~p&lt;~ p.:r P u~ li "&gt; hr r:o. A"&gt;MI(' i&lt;tt ion.
·
LEli E fl'i Of' Cll'llloiiO' a rr ~ rk t 1 m rd . Thr) \ huuld tw I t's~ thlln·JOO "· u rd~ t un ~ . All
lt' ltl· r ~ :~rt• ~U hJr• · t tn tdi U n~r: :t nd mu ~l lw ~il(twd ~ilt1 nam... i! ddrt·5~ a nd trlephunr
numtw r 'l.in u n.•t~ n t• d h· tta ) "" ti l ~· publi, hrd . Lr th· n ~ lwu l d lw In li(' "j(j Ulslt'. :~ddrt'~~ in l(
1~\U I '\ , Oil[ pt' f~ l l/llt litl l '~

Reagan's first
two months
Two months have passed since Ronald Reagan took the presidential
oath. Of course, it will be some time before any definite opinion can be
fonned about t~e new administration. But it is worth noting the differences between Reagan's early days in the Oval Office and those of
Jimmy Carter.
Most observers agree that Carter was far ahead of Reagan. in
organization. Reagan stiU has not filled many major posts, and the White
House says it wiU be another 30 to 60 days before aU appointments are announced. Dozens of agencies, bureaus and offices are still Umping along
with no leadership or direction.
The Reagan people may get low marks on organization. But they are
getting uni!onnly high marks for their handling of what they perceive as
their most immediate problem: the economy. Here a comparison can be
made with the previous administration because both presidents came to
office facing wpat they considered a crisis. For Carter, it was energy; for
Reagan, it was inflation.
Reagan iB much farther along in seUlng his economic plan that Carter
was four years ago in selling his energy plan. The reaaon for this is siJn.
pie: the two presidents' relations, or lack of them, with Congress.
Carter approached Congress as an adversary, an obstacle to overcome.
From the beginning, he viewed senators and representatives as prisoners
of the interest groups that opposed him.
He formulated his energy program without congressional input. Then
he attempted to ram the program down the throat of Congress by going
over its head to the American people. Those tacll; failed and soured the
entire Carter presidency.
Reagan, however, seems to be off to a tremendous start with Congress.
He coJIBulted closely with both sides of the aisle before announcing his
economic package. He heeded only a smaU portion of the advice that he
received from influentlal members of Congress. But at least he involved
them in the decisiOfHIIIl!ting process.
_
Although Reagan is much better like on the Hill that W88 Carter, he is
not COJIBldered to be as personally competent. Many members of
Congress do not think that Reagan has a finn grMp of the issues.
For all his faults, Carter had a masterful grasp of policy questions. He
was highly respected for his abiUty to IUiderstand the complexities of the
problems that confronted him.
.
So, it is still too early to tell whether Reagan w1U have better luck with
his economic package than Carter had with his energy package. It
remains to be seen whether Reagan's early lead wiU translate into signed
legislation-and, even more importanUy, whether that legislation wiU
prove effective.
·

Letter to the editor
For death penalty
It happened our prediction came
true. We aU feared it every day. Our
Prealdent W88 shot - an attempted
aaaasslnatlon of our leader just like
clock work.
WeU, with aU of that and aU of the
fatal shootlnga here in America
today our law hasn't llowed or stop.
peel II yet and probably nev-er w1U
beca111e a penon can shoot or ldll a
pencil and only get Ufe in priaon
wblle Uvtng on our t.u clollan and
maybe not even go lo prison just to a
holpltal IOIIlewhere.
It's time for America to get tough!
'l1le death penalty aounda Wte a
cruel way to punlab a per!IOII when
he lhoota IIOIIleOIIe but that in a lot of
people's e)'8ll Ia just enough for

But coll8ider Haig's own experience. He W88 8I'OIIDd when the
president of the Unlteil States for aU
intent.o; and pUI'pOiell ignored his
secretary of state when it came to
major diplomatic ·demarches .
Secretary of State William Rogen
didn't know' about the China
initiative until about the time
President Nixon gave out news of it
to the entire world. Instinctively
Haig reasonably rilight have won.
dered whether the White Houae's
rather dramatic broadcast of the
hierarchial order was a step in the
Rogerization of Haig. It is true that
he should have suppressed his concern, but it is always a tittle uncomfortable to get sore at someone
for telling the truth.
iben the flap over Mr. Haig's
behavior after the attempted
assassination. Here one wooden
just what it was that motivated not
only Haig to act as be did, but Qis
critics to act as they did. I watched
Dan Rather that night on CBS, and
he appeared positively hypnotized
by Haig's relatively routine
statement that pending the arrival
of the vice president he as secretary
of state was " in charge here." Two
hours later one had the feeling that if
Mr. Rather had found an assistant
professor of political science' at the
University of South Dakota who was
willing to opine that Haig had used a
code word to trigger a coup d'etat,
the gentleman would have been put
on network TV to ventilate his
suspicion.
A few observations:
1) To the charge that Haig was
visibly distressed, let it be said that
he had every reason to be. The

ol President Truman, The Presldelt-

Soviet Union waa widely ezpected,
last Monday, to be prepuing to enter Poland on Tueeday If the general
strike there - notwverted. As a
recent commander ol NATO, Haig,
more intimately than anrone in the
executive branch, knew the military
and derivatively the political reperCU!Sions ~ such a strike, and appreciated eapectally the possible effect of an apparenUy lmmobilized
executive on Soviet behavior.
~
2) lieutenant Haig was commisBioned at West Point ln June
1947. One month later, at the urging

ijal Succeasion Act was amended. to

give auccessively to the speaker rl
the House and the prealdent pro tempore ol the Senate priority over
Cabinet olficiaiB, aenlor of which ia
the secretary of ~te. followed by
the secretary of the treasury.
It is unWtely that Mr. Halg'a
statement In the White House on
Monday was even remotely
animated by a pencJDBl hunger for
power, let alone a Macbetb-type
tmJptatloo to pull ouf a gun and
de8troy such amiable folk aa George

BUill, Tip O'NeiU and lllllm 'I'IIul'
mond.
3) The cryata1llled prerogatives of ·
the u. s. Secretary rl Slate are the
rtghlto COUIIHl the prelldent before .
the preeldellt takel W action oo
foi-elgn poUcy (~ aa Ill lbe Cbina ·
iniilatlve, lsnored-b)'thepneldent);
and the rtglt to periOIIIl (le., ·

' to be aU together. AU in
don't seem
all, it sWII8 up lite this. Gun laws
don't help. '11len only killers w1U
have them, bdt the death penalty
makes a penon think twice before
puiUng that trigger and just maybe
this country can get back in Une and
have a better place to live.
Yaura truly. - Floyd H. Cleland,
Box 223, Rutland, Ohio t57'15.

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) The space shuttle Columbia is on the
launch pad, two years late but ready
to go, only because the Pentagon
convinced President Carter the
nation needed a new military
machine.
On its own, the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration didn~t have half enough
clout to get the shuttle out of its
hangar. A far cry frun moonmission days when NASA was the
toast of official Washingtoo.
Seventeen months ago, the shuttle
was way behind schedule, butting up
against budget ceilinga and taxing
the · patience of its congressional
sponsors.

Effective
.Jburs, April 9th

· Thru
Weds., -April

1/8''
EL
OAK LEAF SILVER
OAK LEAF BRONZE
MALIBU
TANBARK

Without a third party pr.eunt) ac- .
ceu to the president.
·
•
Mr. Halg Is a valuable colleague ol .
Prealdent Reapn, and oo lbe whole :
hla enemiel are thclee one wwld ;
1qJe he would have~

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Reg .
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Western Cedar
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General Store
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Danube
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English Brown Oak $10.57

Sale
Price

5/32" Panel

Space shuttle on pad two years late

•

J

NASA's problem waa basic: II'
timid NASA management at first
sold the program for the Wt-ong
reasons and later seemed reluctant
to seU it at aU.
Alanned at the schedule slippage,
the Air Force stepped ln.
'l1le Air Force longs for a broader
role in outer space, and now, 23
years after NASA's creation, the
civillan apace auncy Ia loelilg its ex- '
elusive control over the nation's
IJI8l)oin-space prorgam. More than a
third of the flnt decade's too shuttle
flights wiU have milltary missions;
the Air Force is building a launching
base in California and a control center in Colorado.
For NASA, much rides on the success of the first shuttle flight.

Legislation

wo~ld

If Columbia falls, the
teclmological credlbiUty NASA has
built through the Mercury, Gemini,
ApoUo and Skylab programs would
come into questioo.
The second shuttle, the
Challenger, won't be deUvered until
mid-1982, and that might be have to
be delayed several months, depending on what went wrong with
Colwnbla.
: .
The bureaucratic price could be
dear.

Failure could lead to tranafer of
shuttle control to the Air Force;
sources in Washington contend some
influential congresamen and highlevel Penlagon officials already advocate such a move. They would at

least like to see the mllltary have
equal authority with NASA.
The Air Force has some 8111bltlous
plans for the shuttle, and American
industry, which had been apectcld
to develop orllluDg manufacturing
techniques, baa shown relatively UtIle intereit so far.
'l1le sbuWe Ia the world'1 first
spaceship that can be flown over and,
over - each craft capable ol. 100 01'
more round trlpa.
At a time not yet determined,

want to have the proper authoritY.''
He said 39 other states already
have similar commlaalons. Amateur
bouts, such aa those aanctioned by
the National Amateur Athletic
Union or the American Olympic
A811ociatloo, would not be affecled.
Carney's bill would levy a 5 per-

ALL SALE

ITEMS
CASH-N-CARRY

· Armstrong Imperial Accutone

VINYL FLOOR COVERING

crewa pllll lo teat,
space wea)JOIII such Ill! laser betma
as a means ol destro)'lnc boat1l&amp;
satellites and balli.sllc mlaall•.
before they rlae above the atlllOII))here.

milltary shuttle

regulate boxing

regulation of boling from local ofCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Professional boxing, a sport en- ficials to a new three-member sll;te
joying new popularity in Ohio, would boring commission.
"I think with the sport becoming
be regulated by the state if a bill
nearing a vote in the Senate popular again we need lo look at it on
·the st.o;te Ieve~" Carney said.
becomes Jaw. .
Sponsored by Sen. Thomas E. Car- "We're getting back to some of the
ney, l){iirard, it would shift club fights we've had before. We

We bought by the truckload
to bring you these
tremendous savings on
Weldwood prefinished paneling from Champion Building
Products. Wide selection
of beautiful woodgrains at
prices to meet your needs
and budget.

cent state tu on the sale of boxiJI&amp;
tickets to finance the COIIIIIIilalon'l
operatlon. 'l1le veteran nortbeaat
Ohio leglalator said be did not kaow
how much the tu would ,_. .te,
"It depends ..,._ many matdlel
we have,'' be said.
•

We ask for it

Don Graff
·------------------------------------------~~

There is one thing that the attempt assas"n's target and has been And also for some problema that
throughout history. But it Ia an un- may not neceaaarily be uniquely
on President Reagan's life is not:
It is not yet another brutal demon- fortwlate fact that the natural- American but that can acquire a ·
stratioo of a fundamental flaw in the vullierablllty of Ieadenliip has been · unique lntenalty in the American
American character. We are not 88 a compounded in the United States by context.
The larger-than-life public persociety rotten to a violent core, the hype 88 weU u the power and
sona
that a president acquires
despite what some among WI may be prestige with which the office of tile
makea ol him more than a celebrity
inclined to read Into the crime presldeney has come to be Invested.
for
certain e1ementa ol the public.
We
make
of
our
presidenll
much
statistics - including the president
He
becomel
an excitant to the unmore
than
political
leaden.
They
whose own rellllll'k8 on the subject
stable
ileraonalltlea,
thole with the
are
Our
foremost
celebrities.
The
were followed ao soon by the
overheated
lmaginatlona
and the
president has become not merely an
shooting.
twilted
mentaliU•
that
turn
ltoob
That shooting Is not to be . lndl,vldual temporarUy holding the
dlamiaaed aa an isolated lnddent. nation's hlgheat office but a cult Into ldllers.
As Newspaper Enterprise
After aU, the IIICCtlllful and at- figure, a one-man media event, a
Alaoclation
tonespoudent Tom
public
performer
subjected
to
and
tempted aulaainationa of Ammcan
Tiede
olieerved
during the laat
for
political
purposes
Inviting
a
type
pubUc figures are a matter.of dlatul'pnllidentlal
ClllllpiJcn.
the potenbing record. But It must be remem- of pubUclty that often ~ more
'
tially
lethal
oddbiUa
are
aa much a
bered that asaau!nationa are acta rl appropriate to the world ol enviolence of a very apeclal type. They tertainment than that rl public af- part ol the American political scene
aa bllloona and llpel buUons. The
fairs.
ahould be seen for what they are Secret
Service, cllarpd with the
It
Ia
a
dlmenaion
rl
political
attacks upon fame and authority,
protection
of pruldenti and
not as expreaslona ol a national leadenhlp In AmeriCII that has no
pnllidentlal
candidates, receives
reai counterpart in any other counp888lon for violence.
There are, however, other leaaons try, for an that others may from · thouaands upon thoulanda ol direct
time to time pnduce their own threats, warninCI ol prw!Ne threat.
to be fOI!l'd in the Reagan lnddent.
charismatic
political penonalltl•. and tipl WI Jl'*'"'fall)' IUipidoua inFor one, It Ia 1 reminder that the
'l1le
charlama
doel not, however, go dlviduall. ·n c1ea1a with the dancer u
American presidency Ia not onlf the
world's mOlt po- ful pclllitloo but with the office aa It baa iDcl'euiJ!CIY belt It can. But liftll the
done with the American pnaldency. berl and tht public dlmlndl upon
also one of Ita 111011t dangerous.
It Ia I altuatloo that makel for a lot the pm!dent, the bellllllllt faD far
Any national Ieider Ia a pateotlal ol uniquely American pol1tlcal color. llhurt olablolute iiWrii:J.

$

8 Foot
Economy

$38900

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Price

Price

$13l6 $1099
s13l6 $1099
$1533 SJzgt

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CARPETING

WITH

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$ Per

Sq. Ft.

Per
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them.
Thll COIIIdr)' can't go WI and let olf
ldllen. Even now down South In
prisons they're letting some
crtmlnals out on leaaer charges to
make I'OCJIII for the8e people who

•
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•

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�TheDa
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Southem

Phils-Reds
ope11
.
1981 season today

defeats

'

Vikings

By AiaocJ.tedPreea

Steve Henderson of the Cubs and Thursday' nll{ht agallllt the
Olive ICingman of the New York Mariners ln.Seatlle. Free qent pltMets, who were swapped in the early · eher Gecff Zahn gets the ealllpilllt
National League West a year ago days of spring training, wtl1 Glenn Abbott· befQre 36,000 In the
ri!Bume hostilities In I..o9 Angeles. probably atea1 the spoWght from pit- Klngdome.
·
The NL's. two · neweal managers chers Pat Zachry of New York and
1be Angela' pltchlu8,ataff a year
square off In· San· FranclBco. The Rick Reuschel of Chicago.
ago will! ln wone ~ lhlll the
main m~ In a major trade will try
The fourth NL game is in Pit- economy and the team 111111*1 from
to draw first blood in Chicago.
IBhurgh, where 40,000 are expected a divisional crown in 1m.U the Uy
· And the 1981 huebaU season to watch the skidding Pirates and I~ to ~ place. One of buebeli'a
laBtlng anywhere from seven weeks game winner Jim Bibby entertain "great cliches 18)'11 "pitching II the
to six montha - will be' under way the hungry young Mootreal Expo~~, name of the game," 10 II will he inlor real,
who will call on Steve Regen.
temsting to see wbllher the Auiela
The traditional opener was
In the American league, 55,000 have any to go With a verit.ble 111111'
scheduled for today in Cincinnati, Yankee Stadium fanatics will help derers row of bat.vnen.
with the Reds hosting the world the East Olvislon champion New
"Pitching is the key," 18)'11 Joe
champion Philadelphia Phillies, York Yankees get under way again- TorreoftheNewYorkMeta,ecboing
whose manager, Dallas Green, says, st the TelliS Rangers. Tommy John, the fee- of every other ID8lllger.
"We're the team to beat.'' Once that a 22-game winner, lrill be on the
On Friday in Baltimore, with
is out of the way, 16 more teams mound for the Yankees and Jon 5l,IDI espected, the Orioles lllllid Cy
open on Thursday,_four games in Matlack for Te:~~as but the Young Award wil\ner Steve
each league.
microscope wiU be on multi- :1.$-7 a year ago, agalqst the AL
In
I..o9
Angeles,
the
Dodgers
meet
millionaire left fielder Dave Win- champion Kanaaa City Royall and
CAUGHT IN RUNDOWN- Boston Red Sox Glenn Tuesday. Tiger shortstop Darren Jones is about to
the Houston Astros, their conquerors field.
Dennis Leonard, hlmaelf a »game
Hoffman is caught In rnndowu between flnt ani! mate tag on Hoffman after taldng toas from his first
In a one-game divisional NL West
At Bloomington, Minn., where the winner.
serood after be singled to right field In fHth IDniDg of
haaemau John Wocken!uas. During rundown Bosox
playoff last season. A Dodger estimate is for a crowd of 25,000, the
Another AL opener in Bolton flDda
game with the Detroit Tlgen iD Winter Haven Tony Perez went iD to score. (AP Laserphoto) .
Stadium crowd of 50,000 will see Joe Oakland A's send· 22-game winner Dennis Eckersley of the Red Sen:
Niekro, Houston's 20-game winner, Mike Norris against Jerry Koosman facing Britt Bums of the Chicago
take the mound against I..o9 Angeles'. of the Twins. In economically White Sox in a game that Ia certain
Jerry Reuss, who authored the depressed Detroit, the Tigers caD on to be an emotional return of free
majors' only no-hitter a year ago.
Jack Morris to pitch against Jim agent catcher Carlton Fisk to New
Up the coast in San Francisco, Clancy of the Toronto Blue Jays. .England, where 32,000 will pack
· Frank Robinson, the first black Detroit's _,.blue-collar fans, 50,000 friendly Fenway Park.
manager to be hired and the first to strong, ar'f: expected to vent their ire
Friday's only NL opener Ia 1 night
be fired, gets a second chance with on left fielder Steve Kemp, who took game In AUanta where the hlfd. .
another team, the Giants. Across the the Tigers to a controversial ar- hitting Braves, with TOIIliiJY Boggs
CINCINNATI (AP) - Tom Seaver
" All good pitchers are going to
"We're the team to beat," Green fiel&lt;l in-the other dugout with he huge bitration and won a $800,000 salary.
as their pitcher, entertain the Reds
said be was looking forward to have some similar traits. You're sa'id, as the Phillies held their final Frank Howard, making his
The AL's most topsy-turvy team, andMarioSoto.TheBraveseJpeCia
crossing swords with the . going to be extremely competitive, workout Tuesday in Riverfront managerial debut as pilot of the San the California Angels, gel under way . crowd of around 38,000.
Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Steve. very durable, have great con- Stadium. "I don't think we're going Diego Padres.
Carlton in more games than just the centraton on the mound and don't to be complacent. We're a much bet·
Left.handers John Curtis of the
opener this season.
repeat mistakes."
ter team than we were in 1980 but, of Padres and Vida Blue of the Giants II
The two starling pitchers in
Seaver, who is hoping for his first course, we've got to stay sound with wiU be the pitchers before a crowd of
today's National League season healthy season in the last three, our key people."
50,000 in Candlestick Park.
"Located at the Point Pleasant Inn'
' V · ~
opener were both Cy Young Award spent the winter working out. He
Green said the addition of fonner
Rt . 62 North
·
Point Pleuant, W. •·
And in Chicago's Wrigley Field,
winners.
said he talked with Carlton about Atlanta Braves Gary Matthews in with 36,000 expected, outfielders
The Perfect Evening, Cocktails, Dining and the Steve
"I would like to pitch about seven their practice during spring training left field gave the Phils added power
Yates Band.
innings and hopefully keep us in the in Florida.
plus speed in their lineup.
Wed. &amp; Thur. Nite
baUgame," said the 3&amp;-year-old
"I talked to him the other day in
"I used to have to make a choice
Ladies Nites SOc Bar Drinks
Seaver before the game.
Clearwater. I said, 'You're throwing between power or speed, and I don't
"If you can do that on Opening as good as I am. We ought to give have that problem now," Green
Frida N itE:
IN STOCK
Day, that's an accomplishment. "
them quite a show.'" Seaver said.
said. "Matthews has settled us cdnURBAN COWBOY &amp;COWGIRL' NITE
00
"We have some similarities,"
Phillies Manager Dallas Green, siderably. He's given us a 'con(Prizes Awarded for Best Dresoed).
Seaver said, comparing himself to whose team won the World Series sistency we didn't have last year. I
TRANSPORTATION , OP Carlton, who does not give out in· last season, betieves Philsdeiphia is think he is one of the best aU-around
TIONS AND DEALER PREP
terviews.
even stronger this season.
, players in the National League."
Special Elvis Tribute Set
EXTRA. 10· PERCENT JEEP
Call 304·675-6276
ROLLBACK INCLUDED.
Reservations
Are Optiona I
lverslde Ami jeep
, WEEKEND SPECIAL
GALLIPO~IS,OHIO
Free !ega·! beveragtwithany
CINCINNATI (AP ) - Opening baseball player."
there were a lot of people. We sat
446·9800
The teams that battled down to
and beyond the wire to decide the

Slone:

Seaver-Carlton match -up
could he 'quite a show'

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiii;=:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i
MUSIC SHOWCASE

.

1981 JEEP CJ'S's

Hegame.
remembers his first Opening
Day
" I was in the sixth grade, I think.
My dad got tickets from where he
worked. I remember getting out of
school, and going to the parade, then
to old Crosley Field. - remember

along
left fieldabout
line, inme
theplaying
second
deck. the
I thought
down there on the field when I grew
up. I don't remember if the Reds
won that day. I don't think so. When
I was a kid, it seemed like the Reds
would lose every Opening Day

SUPERIOR E·Z-CARVE

.

BY: BLUEGRASS

18" to 22" CUT

AnORNEYS AT LAW

HALF OR

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$ 59

Bon.eless .Hams....L!·••
TASTEE TREAT
Chunk Bologna...~·.
FRENCH CITY •
.
.
.
'
W1eners•.............P.K~
12

oz.

.••

'

Angle Hatfield picked up the win
In her flnt lltlrtlng appearance. Sbe
went the distance, llriklng out one
and giving up 10 walk.s, while
• allowing ju1Uhree bill.
.
'

Steven L. Story and Karen H. Story
236 w. 2nd, Pomeroy, Oh.
(Formerly Meigs Gen . Hospital)
992-6624
Home Ph. 992-3523

GRADE AEXTRA.LARGE

Eggs

In the last 1nn1ni Meip was down
by one n111 with one out. Jeften llai"
ted a Melp' rally with a walk,
foUOIIIId by along home n111 by Jen, ny Meadowl that gave Meigs the
lead. Liter Angle Hatfield singled,
• Lori . Maynard alngled, and Barb
G..-r llngled borne runs.
'

WE ARE MOVING

.

Pizza.~~f!.~~~~!....~.o:•.~

The Daily Sentinel

EFFECTIVE MONDAY APRIL 13, 1981

IIJIIII-)

ADiwllllalf'? '1

tr , lie.

PAGE ST .

I
I
-~.-L_oc_·_:_TI_O_N. . .~ 1
I:

j

.----N-IW-'"""1LI
"0

I&gt;
la

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Jlai'I1IASTI!R:
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Strawberries
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Charcoal ...........~ ....
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Pork Sausa e.... !!...

: Jeliny Meadowl carried the' big
, hat for Meigs as she hlmmered a
; h&lt;me nm and a lingle. Valerie Jef.
· fen had two lllnglea, Angie Hatfield
; two lllngles, Cindy Parter, Lori
: Maynard, Barb Grueeer, Beth
Gloeckner, Diane Rou, and Paula
: N01111111 each added singles. Smith,
; Hartman, and ~ accounted
: for the only Atheni hill, which were
: allllingles. ·

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STORY &amp; STORY

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$ 49
Pork Chops ........~·...
BALLARD'S
$ 09.
CENTER CUT LOIN

ve !lllftballaquad poaled a 13-10 win
: In Ita find outing of the season
· the Athena Bulldogs. Melga outhit its
opponent 13-10, but 111111 had to rely
: on a come-IMIID-behind effort in the
last Inning to pWl off the win.

THE OFFICES OF.

IK ST., MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Pork Chops ....... ~~.

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Roat SPRINGS - Meigs' reser-

THE OPENING OF

STORE HOURS: Monday thru Frid~J
7:00 a.m. til 5:00 p.m.
Saturday 7:00 a.m. til 3:00 p.m.
PHONE 992-6611 ·or 992·2709

POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE lHROUG SAT., APRIL 11

Young lady Marauders

/-;::~;~~~::~;~;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

ANNOUNCING

555 PARK ST., MI.DDLEPORT

298 SECOND ST.

Southern
103 400 1-9 II o
Vinton Vo.
200 000 0-2 3 I
Batteries: K. Wolfe (WP) and J.
Rees. S.O. 9, BB 3. Bailey (LP) and
Cox; S.O. 2, BB 7.

~~=

r-- - - -- - - - -- -=!!!::..'_'- -- - - - - - 1

Office

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

Llnelcore:

Oester only change in Reds' order
Dlly
in Cincinnati,
the firsl
professional
team inwhere
baseball
was
launched in 11169, is New Year's Eve
aU day and little boys soon learn
they can skip school without penalty
from their teachers or parents.
Few of them, however, realize the
common dream - to grow up and
play for the Cincinnati Reds, the
team that is the center of all that
celebrating.
Pete R~ was one. But he now
plays for the Philadelphia Phillies,
the team the Rros.open the National
League's 1981 season with today.
Another is second baseman Ron
Oester, who makes his first start as
a regular and is atwitter about it.
"There's no possible way for me to
describe 'how I feel," said the 24year-old native Cincinnatian.
"Last year was a big thrill," when
he was wanning the bench, " but
that doesn't compare to this. I don't
see a lot of my friends from high
scbooi that much because some of
them have gone their own way, but
the ones I keep in touch with can't
believe it. They can't believe a guy
they knew so close is a major league

Mon.-Sal 8 am-10 pm

BY 11001'1' WOllE
McARTHUR- Tbe Southern Tornadoes couled to a 0.2 win 1tver nonleque opp(lll!llt Vinton County here
Tuelday everilDC behind an 11 hit attal$ and flawleila defensive play,
Soutbem Ia now ~I on the year.
Southil'ir Kent Wolfe went the
di.lltance to pick up the win, striking
out nine Vikings and walking just
three.
'
After ibe .flnt inning in which
Wolfe gave up Vinton County's only
hlta, the junior hurler Willi near pe!'fecl tbe duration ~the IIIJDI!. Baney
went the diltance for Vinton County,
lllriklng out two and glvlng up seven
Wllka.
Southern look a 1.0 lead in the first
when WoHe doubled hoine McNickle
who had walked. Later that same lnni.n&amp;, the Vikings tOok their only lead
of the game on alngles by Cottrill
and Oney, followed by a misplayed
baD In center that went for a double.
Vinton County then took a 2.-llead.
Soutbem took the lead In the third
when Jay Ree8 alngled, K. Wolfe
walked and Bryan Wolfe alngled
home Rees. Paul Cardone then
knocked home both Wolfe's with a
lingle, the acore now ~2.
Southern plated four more I'W1II in
the fourth on a walk to Rees, singles
by Kent WoHe and Dale Teaford,
folloWed by a two nm double by
Bryan WoHe. In the lleVenth Paul
Roush llingled home Allen Pape with
the Jut nlll of the game.
A Tornado quartet ripped two hits
each, led by Dale Teaford with a
triple and lllngle, Bryan Wolfe a
double and a single, Kent Wolfe a
double and lllngle, and Paul Cardone
two lllngles. Paul Roush lined a
single, Jay Ree8 had • single, and
Zane Beegle a single.
Tonight Southern liOIIts Hannan
Trace In an SVAC league contest:

..

'5995

STOllE HOURS:

ttl

Ito&amp; a ... _... .. PQ' tlto coirior

--~~~--to,.
OoiiY
laillttal
• a I, I or U lbiiiOih - . cr.dlt
wiD ballltm_aodt_

No I lfll ltr.,U _ _ Itt_
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..,.He .

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16 oz.
LOAF

BREAD

4/$1

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only 1t f'owell's .
Offer lxplres April II, 1911

MAXWEll. HOUSE

COFFEE
3 LB. CAN
AU. GRINDS $599
Limit One Per Customer ·
Good Only 1t Powell's
Offer Explrll Aprllll, 1911

5 LB•

.

BAG

LOlJPllN

;

FlAVORITt

HYLAND

SUGAR

DOG FOOD

$} ~9

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Explrts Aprllll, 1911

25 LB.

BAG

$349

Limit one Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer
Aprll11, 1981

�Pap~6-The

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, Apr118, 1981

.Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wildlif~

council approves .
dates for hunting season

,._,,Afdll

'

COLUMBUS - The Ohio Wildlife
Council has approved the 1981-19112
bunting and trapping aeason dates
and additional new regulationa that
were proposed by Carl L. Mtlllley,
Jr., chief of the Division of Wildlife
of the Ohio Department of Natural
ResourCes (ODNR) .
Public testimony presented at the
district and state wildlife hearings
was considered before the
regulations were presented to the
Wildlife Council at its April meeting.
The 1981·1982 hunting and trapping
aeason dates are:
Squirrel - Sept. 22 through Nov.
14, 1981 on private tand and Sept. 11
. through Dec. 19, 1981 on state public
hunting areas. Hunting hours are
one-hail hour before sunrise to onehalf hour after sunset, with a dlaly
limit of four and a pOssession limit of
eight allen the first day. The season
will open Sept. 25 and continue
through Dec. 19, 1!181 at the Waterloo
Experiment Station in Athens County.
Ruffed Grouse - Oct. 9 through
' Feb. '!/. Hunting hours are one-half
hour before sunrise to one-half hour
after sunset, with a daily limit of
three and a possession limit of six after the first day. Grouse bunting is
prohibited on KeUys Island.
Cottontail Rabbit - Nov . 2
through Jan. 30, 1982 on aU public
hunting areas. In the remainder of
the state the season will be Nov. 13
through Jan. 30, 1982. Hunting hours
are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. with a daily bag
limit of four and a possession limit of
·eight after the first day.
Bobwhite Quail - No open season.
Ring-Necked Pheasant Cock and
Cbukar Partridge - Nov. 13 through
Dec. 12, 1981 on pnvate land and
Nov. l31hrougb Jan. 16,1982 on state
public hunting areas. Hunting hours
•are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. with a daily bag
: limit of two cock pheasants and two
·cbukar and a posaession limit of four
each after the first day. Hen
pheasants may not be taken at any
time.
Fox Trapping - Oct. 28 through
Jan. 16, 1982. No bag or possession
:limit.
: Fox Hunting - Oct. 28 through
:Jan, 16, 1982. No bag or possession
·limit.
Opossum, Skunk and Weasel Trapping - Oct. 28 through Jan. 16, 1982.
No bag or possession limit.
Raccoon, Opossum, Skunk and
Weru:el Hunting - Nov. I through
:Jan. 30, 1982. Hunting hours are 6
p.m. to 6 a.m. Nightly bag limit for
raccoon is four with no posaession
limit. No bag limit for opossum,
skunk or weasel.
Mink, MUBkrat and Raccoon Trap•ping - Nov. 11 through Jan. 30, 1982.
' No bag or possession limit. The trapping season for all fur·bear,ing
animais except fox is extended
through March 15, 1982 in Lucas
County east of the Maumee River,
and in Ottawa, SandUBky and Erie
counties.
Beaver Trapping - Dec. 6 through
'Jan. 30, 1982 on private land in
'Ashtabula, · Athens, Belmont,
Carroll, Columbiana, Coshocton,
Fairfield, Gallia, Guernsey,
Geauga, I:Jarrison, Hocking,
.Holmes, Jackson, Jefferson, Knox,
;Lake, Lawrence, Licking,
·Mahoning, ~edina . Meigs, Monroe,
:Morgan, MUBkingurn, Noble, Perry,
Portage, Scioto, Stark, Summit,
Trumbull, TIIBcarawas, Vinton,
Wayne and Washington counties. All

beaver traps must be cleared by 8 thtllle Ohio counties not listed in
p.m. ·on Jan. 30, 19112. The season zones one, two or three. Antlerl81111
limit is 10 and each trapper is per- deer hunting pennits will be lasued
mitted to use five traps.
in selected counties of zories one and
Bearded Wild Turkey - April 28, four. Hunting hours for the gun
1982 through May I, 1982 and May 3, season are 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Kelleys
1982 through May 8, 1982. Hunting is Island Is closed to deer gun hunting.
permitted in Adams, Athens, Hunting of all wild animals, except
Carroll, Gallia, Guernsey, Highland, deer and waterfowl, is prohibited
Hocking, Holmes, Jackson, Jef- during the deer gun season, Inferson, Lawrence, Meigs, Monroe, cluding · the January primitive
Morgan, Perry, Pike, Ross, Scioto, weapons deer season.
Vinton and Washington counties.
Statewide Primitive Weapons
Limit is one turkey per license year. Season- Jan. 5, 1982 through Jan. 7,
Hunting hours are one-half hour . 1982. Hunting hours are 7 a.m. to 5
before sunrise to noon.
p.m.
Crow Hunting - Thursday,
Young Hunters Season - Oct. 24
Friday and Saturday of each week and Oct. 31, 1981. LegBI game
be~ the first Thursday in
ncludes rabbits, pheasants, cbukar
January and continuing through the partridges and all other game
third Saturday in March; and Thill' currenUy in season. The special hunsday, Friday and Saturday of each ts will be conducted at Delaware,
· week beginning with the second Resthaven, Oxbow, Spencer, Dillon,
Thursday of Jline and continuing Caesar Creek and Grand Riber
through the last Saturday in Decem- public hunting areas. Hunting hours,
ber. No bag or possession limit. Hun- daily bag limlts and possession
ting hours are one-half hour before limits are the same as during the
sunrise to sunset.
regular upland game season. Par·
ticipants must be between 10 and 15
Woodchuck Hunting - The season years of age. The Wildlife Council
is open statewide all year with no approved several other regulations
restrictions on hours; dally bag in addition- to the hunting and traplimits or possession limits, except ping season dates. Among those
that it is closed during the deer gun regulations are ones that:
- Prohibit any person other than
season. Woodchucks may not be
those
hunting, trapping or fishing to
hunted with a crossbow during the
be on the East Fork Lake Wildlife
deer longbow archery season.
Deer Seasons - The limit is one Area between a p.m. and 6 a.m.
during the period from Oct. 1
deer per license year.
Longbow- Oct. 3 through Jan. 30, through May I, and between 10 p.m.
19112. Open statewide. Hunting hours and 6 a.m. during the period from
are one-half hour before sunrise to May 2 through Sept. 30 without first
obtaining written pennissio.n from
one-half hour after sunset.
Early Primitive Weapon Season- the Chief of the Division of Wildlife.
- Allow physically handicapped
Nov. 2 through Nov. 7, 1981 on Wildcat Hollow in Athens, Morgan and )iersons to hunt from a statioitary
Perry counties, Salt Forksdlife motor vehicle.
- Allow the buying and selling of
Area in Guernsey County and
Shawnee State Forest in Adams d bear teeth and claws, and the hideS,
Scioto counties. Hunting hours a 7 feathers and other parts of 'Wild
a.m. to 5 p.m. Legal hunting im- animals raised under a Propagating
plements are a single shot m=l.e Penni!, provided the seller keeps
loading rifle of at least .38 caliber, a accurate records of the species o~
muzzle loading shotgun UBing a tained and sold.
- Add Alum Creek, Maumee Bay,
single ball, a longbow or a crossbow.
Only bucks may be taken during the Sycamore and Great Seal state
parks to the areas where all legal
early primitive weapona season.
game
may be hunted and trapped.
•Crossbow - Nov. 7 through Jan.
30, 1982. Open statewide. Hunting
hours are one-half hour before
- Penni! deer bunting with
sunrise to one-half hour after sunset. primitive weapons during the
Gun- The state will be divided in· January primitiv~ weapons hunt on
to four deer gun zones a.s follows :
the Mosquito Creek WilWife Area
Zone One - Nov'. 30 through Dec. waterfowl refuge by persons who o~
4, 1981 for buck only (five-inch antler lain a special free pennlt for that
minimum). Zone one includes Allen, areas. The pennits will be issued on
Auglaize, Champaign, Crawford, a limited basis.
Cuyahoga, Defiance, Delaware,
- Prohibit a non-resident from
Erie, Franklin, Fulton, Hancock, receiving an antlerless deer penni!
Hardin, Henry, Huron, Logan, if the state where the person resides
Lorain, Lucas, Marion, Medina, does not allow an Ohio sident to
Mercer, Morrow, Ottawa, Paulding, receive an antlerleas deer pennit
Pickaway, Putnam, Sandusky, from that state.
Seneca, Shelby, Union, Van Wert,
- Prohibit any other person but
Wood and Wyandot.
the person who bags a deer from
Zone Two - Nov. 30 through Dec. presenting that deer for ~ent
4, 1981 for buck only (five-inch antler tagging a~ a checking station. - ·
minimum). Zone two includes
- Prohibit the bunting of all wild
Butler, Clark, Clinton, Darke, animals e1cept deer and waterfowl
Fayette, Greene, Hamilton, during the January primitive
Madison, 1\fiami, Montgomery, weapons deer season.
Preble and Warren counties.
- Prohibit non-residents from
Zone Three - Nov. 30 for buck or hunting, trapping or possessing wild
doe, Dec. 1 through Dec. 4, 1981 for animals In the state If Ohio residents
buck only (five-Inch antler are excluded from such activities in
minimum) . Zone three includes that non-resident's homesta~.
Ashtabula, Geauga, Lake,
~~~it anyone from placing in
Mahoning, Portage,' Stark, Summit the CU8lOOY of another person a
beaver or beaver hide that has not
and Trumbull counties.
Zone Four- Nov. 30 through Dec. been tagged. No person may receive
5, 1981 for buck only (five-inch antler or poesess an Ohio beaver that is mt
minimum). Zone four includes all tagged.

:History on Blyleven's side
TUGSON, Ariz. (AP) - Bert
Blyleven will have history - as well
· as his famOUB curveball - on his
side when he takes the mound for the
Cleveland Indians in Saturday's
opener against the Milwaukee
'Brewers.
"I've started eight openers, and
I've won five of them, " Blyleven
said. "Last year's was the first one I

ltllll."
That was by a I~ score, when
.Blyleven was wearing a Pittsburgh

•

compiling a career record of 11).9
and an earned run average of 2.52
vs.Brewers hitters.
"We've got a good•pitching staff,
so It's really just a matter of getting
the season started and getting into
our routine," Blyleven said.
The 30-year-old right-bander,
wbtllle curveball bas been tenned
the best in the game, will start the
opener despite a mediocre spring
performance, Including a 6.43 ERA
and z.:J record

unlfonn. He was lnlded to the Indians during the off!eaSOII for pit·
chers Bob Owchinko, Victor Cruz
and Rafael Vasquez and catcher
GarY Al•der.
His past opening day successes,
coupled with his seniority on the Indians' pitching staff In lenns of
Major League eiperience, earned
B!yleven the honor of starting this
opener, ManagerDaveGarclasaid
Blyleven alao bas customarily
been effective agalnat Milwaukee,

.Modell likes Browns' schedule
- CLEVELAND (A 'P) - Art Modell,
:owner.of the Cleveland Browns, says
·bia team's 1981 National Football
:~ague schedule Is challenging, and
'be lites it that way.
, "It Ia a very difficult schedule,
e.peclally at the beginning, but I Jtke
It,'' aald Modell. "We're paying the
price rA succeu, and I'm tbrilled by
it." .
'11le Browna had an 11~ regular
:mart last year, good for the
~onshlp of the American Football Conference Central Division.
· The Iough achedule ope111 with a
Sept. 7 Monday night game in
Cleveland against the san Diego
Olargers, the champions of the AFC
West. Included· are pme1 againlt
four other 1eeo playoff teams HOUlton Oilers (twice), Atlanta
FalcOns, Buffalo Billa and Loe
Angeles Rams.
~

,,

The Chargers game will be
televised naUonally, as will the
pme1 wben the BI'DWIIII play the
Oilers on Thunday night, Dec. 3 and
the New York Jell on Saturday, Dec.

' If.
' ' •"·····.~.·1
·

•

•

For the

I

wino-

~

~

111,

ar,

Ill, -

_,,Apll!

•• 1m ADpiM •• H 1-1

Clly IlK, Porllond . , KaDiu

att w1n1 JOrieo 1-1

record ••.

I

Calx

cE'

trwk

•

BRADBURY 'HooD- Memben ollbe Bradbury
llood grl!de school basketball team lhll lleUOII were
(frontl, Coacb Jobn Hood. Bean Glbbe, Todd Hood,

David Smltb, IIIII Cbrll Beeker. Bilek row, Joey
Lovtuc, EdcUe Bller, Randll Aroold, Scott Rautnl,
111111 Cbrll Davii~Ableut were P. J. Glbbl, 111111 Cellcb
GreuGtbbe.

U.S. GOV'T.
GRADED CHOICE. BEEF CHUCK

-

r Blade· Cut.
Chuck Roast

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY

""'..._MCh.....ICu:JQttr StOle. e11cep1 be
IV...,._ for 1111

f.och of

11

reQuired

tg

~
tn
It
~ r.-:1.,.. . . . ,. If M cao run~~ of ¥1 ~ted
item, Wit -Mil otftr YOU VOuf chotce of 1 comp1rlble lftm ,

when

$ 29

tv._, rlt*:t.ng 1ht Utnl "UVtngt or 1 rllnCheck

which Mil tnhtle '(OU 10 pure~
'-::1 pnce oMttwt Jl csavs

.a..

I~ advertllld lltm 11 the

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE

11111011 LtWI'IICI
MACARONI &amp; CHUSl

Ayondale
Di nner .... 7 '1•·...CI .

~ yOu bu'f 11 tr;rOQtr • g.....-ant~M !Of .,.our 10UII
MtilfiCtion r~cle. of IT\IflufiCIUtet II yOu Itt not IIIII·

tied, KfOglf will rtPiiCe VOUI •ltm wtlh tht ..,. brand or •
CIOI'r't*lbll brw.d 0t t.tunQ youtpyrci\HI puce

AVONOAU

,COfl't'ltiGHT 1911 · THI KIOGII CO . ITEMS AND P'IIICES
GOOD SUNDAY , APIIIl J YHIIU SATU.CAV . APIIL 11 I til
IN POMEROY AHD GALLI POLIS STORES.

Boneless Boston
Roll Roast .. ...... lb.

•I

m

I
I1,....._,,,,
I

Gunnoe's
Country Sausage

I
I
I

I
I

WHITLATCH TEAM- Pictured are members of . Hlwley, Abient were Steve CuHll, Lake llarDeU,
tbe Bradbury Wbltlatcb grade school buketball team.
Laura WaylaDd, P. S. Rlcbmolld, Sb•n- Cellla,
Front row- Nikki Wbltlatch, Britt Uttle, Laura Fry;
Deai8e Glbeaut, Mickey Davia, and Cellcb Ten)'
second row - Silane Engle, Mike Southern, Roimle
Wllltlatcb.

I

I
I

Jays z.o. .
Rich Dauer hit a Sllcriflce fly in
the first inning and a baseil-l1111ded
grounder in the seventh for two RBI
to lead the Baltimore Orioles put
the New York Yankees 3-2.

7~

ahead
to siiY
vtctory over
the Angels.
• in a
Luis Gomez drove in four runs as
the Atlanta Braves pounded the St.
Louis Cardinals 11~. Plncb-hltter
•

DR~SSES

Pork Steaks ........ .. lb.

SUITS
Reg.

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

w.$

to

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$40.00

88

$

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,,.o• ·

379

1000 ISLAND . J.IIENCH 011
ITALIAN LIQUID

Kroger
"-- I

C

,.....

95c

........ " '··' ltl.

Meat Bologna .. ........ lb.
IXTRA LEAN
$149
Ground Beef ........... lb.
GINUINE
$179
Ground Chuck ...... ... lb.

....

Kroger
Gelatin .. .

Avondale

• · CI .

5

Flour ...... . . ;~
AVONDALE CUT

' Green
I6•CI .
leanl .. .. .. Con

I

UOGII

.I

.......... ''"
Pork &amp;

Square
Ice Cream

I6 •CI .

$ 99

99 C
99 C

Springdale
2% Milk

$8.00

99

. IN THE "ICI K•OGE.

CIOVII VAlLEY

Margarine 1·1., .
lluarten .. "•.
COUNTIF:dN

~

l

Willi ......

39

c

$

...... 119
l"kg .

JICIOGill

Flake
1··01 .
Coconut .. "a ·
GOLD CllSl

Kroger
White Bread.

Now

Mlnhmallow
II·"'

,._

2 11-oa.$109

I.OWN 'N' SE.VE

Kroger Rolls ...... .

Cream ·ch eese ........ .. Pkg.

I•OI .

75c

Jar

19

$

l·oa $129

Shredded Cheese ..... Pka:
UOGEI

Kroger .
CoHage Che~se

l'kgt.

KIOGII SHAIIP . ,.ZZA OR MOZZARELLA

Y'Wftll .....

24·01.
Ctllr•

Chi.

..

,

AVONDALI

KIDDIE SHOPPE
111 w. 2nd

Pomeroy, Oh •

t;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

UOZEN

AVAilAILI 0NL Y IN
STOIUW1TH
DILl Dim.
HOTPOODI
AVAILAILIIlelll

..

Morton
·D•anners ..10.75-oa.
l'kg .

I·~IECESPI!H

o• liQUIO
$155
1
Prell Shimpo~ ~~r· , ,
I.IGHT MULTI·COLOIEO ·
$1
I0-oa.

JeII' Beans .. ..

0

......

IIWI¥11 ..... C••

.....

63c
49c
..... 43c
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....... ,_ 39c
HIUCIUT

Mntchlno

a. rri

~U,'IES ,

5799.

FiJh Bucket .. B11cket $359

SLIQO OilY THE PIECE , IONGHOIN

Colby Cheese ..... lb.
F.ESH lAKED . STIAWIUIY
• .. l·lnch
$169
Rh Ubarb PII
. rJe

Pkw•·

~ggs'.;:;·

.

Captain's Choace

2 '

OALT FOII·WIAI'PED 50110 MILK

Chocolate

U..l

TIL''"'

INCIUOES: l·LI . COLI SlAW, 2A HUSH

S·OZ . CONCENTRATE

$129

.

fniH CAIIOT o• COCONUT

,.,

.....

... c."

1liOGII
....

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(i1t111&amp;1 IIW PIICIJ
V'
-

$449
Fresh .
$129 Layer Cake ... l·lnch
.Cake
COMfort
79
·Caulflower Hecld
FIIIH lAKED
7
9
C Dllpen....
FlESH
lb $149
French Bread ... t~:J·
. . . , . •• h.
Mushrooms ... ~rk.n
S.C. ..... .··~··
INDIAN IIVII . WHITE
··lb. $J98
s....
Grapefruit... . ...
S.C. ..... 'tr·
lome Aaales

$4
age
99c.
E:.~~~~-::· $J 09

DAYTVIOI

BIG BEND
SERVICE CENTER
.

61-Ct.

1

California.
Strawberries

992-2894

'

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

l·lb

Luncheon Meats .. Pkg :

20% OFF

At

WITH ,FRIES .......... '1 1'

All VA.IETIES , SERVE 'N' SAVE

"

$)0.00
to
$50.00

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1111111 . INti i 11111.11 . IIIII II . 1111

1111111 TIIIPI.ICIII! IIIT11111CA111111

•&lt;

Spring

atiCKEN OR TUNA SAlAD~••·.. 79•

~

$2 39

KIOGEI

lnltant
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&amp;

In Shape For

. SPECIAl. OF THE WEEKI

DF

LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMII Y

..
•

Get Your Car

Racine, Oh.

l2

.

LIMIT li'OUNOS WITH COUPON

I

• ... .LI . AVG .. WHOLE FRESH BOSTON IUTT
SliCED INTO

r--.J..._-----'---EASTER

1-lb.
Roll

'~ 1 m.

••••••••••••••••••

Hisle hurti'f'g. opposition
' By The Auoclated Pn!u
Gfl'Y Woods' tw&lt;H'Wl single in the
Larry Hisle has missed most of the eighth inning capped a folll'run rally
past two seasons with injuries, but that gave the Houston Astros a 5-4
this spring he's been putting the hurt 1 victory over the San Francisco Gianon the opposition.
ts.
·
Batting at a .351 clip in exhibition
The Detroit Tigers pounded leftgames, the Milwaukee outfielder bander Frank Tanana for 11 hits in
continued to burn up the Cactus five innings.and beat the Boston Red
League Tuesday with three hits, in- Sox t-3. Hal McRae broke a
eluding a home run, as the Brewers scoreless tie with a third-inning
walloped the Seattle Mariners 12-4.
double, then came home on Willie
Combined with a 4-for-4 four per- Aikens' sll)gle as the Kansas City
formance Monday, Hisle's slugging Royals blanked the Toronto Blue
Tuesday gave him seven ,stralglt r----------~
hits before be fUed out. Overall, he
has hit six homers and collected 12. AUTHORIZED CAlf'ALOG
RBI this spring.
SALES MERCHANT
Hisle had a run-scoring single as
the Brewers opened with five runs in
the first inning. Hisle's homer in the
second inning was one of four bit 1lY
the Brewers. Ben Ogilvie, Thad
Phone 992'2171
Bosley and Ted Simmons hit the
101 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
others.
OWNED AND OPERATED BY
Elsewhere, newcomers John
· Jack &amp; .luciy Williams
Urrea and John Uttlefield held
Open: Mon. thru Wad. 9-5
Thur. 9-12, Fri. N, Sat. 9-2
California hitiess over the final four
Sollsfacllon Guaronteed
innings and Juan Bonilla's twC&gt;-nm
., Y.our MOMY lack .
double put a spUt San Diego squad

29

$

Sweet
.
PI l l ...... . 11·01
Con

U.S. GOV'T . GRAOED CHOICE . IEEf CHUtK ARM

WI ••n•vl THl liGHT YO UMlf QUANTI11Ei . NONi
SOLD YO DIAUIS.

.
BEL-MAR

$
.Q..

QUALITY ACTION POOTWUR

MEN'S, WOMEN'S, AND CHILDREN'S

Middle of ufll'tr Block

!-!~ ~~

Each

110011

--

ltl.

.

·W .. Applesw17c
89C

....

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22c
oac -59c
69c

T.-to
...... '""'-·

......... c.
COUhllt 0V1M

....111111

Pomeroy,Ohle
'

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•

12••·

110011

INC.

-

.......... .... 59c
110 YAI.UI

•••••••

All SIZES MD
COLORS AVAIIJBL£
•

HARTLEY

IIUIII. CALIF&lt;WttA .

.1:· 99c
10c

P~&lt;,.

WASIIIIOTON

dlrlln8t ot televlllon," ~u laid.

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Ponlonll , lJI, ~
tlod,,.,l-1
1m Anf'tllo 111, lledH

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.{·

,..-----------+------------l

12.
ACCOJiling to Modell, It is abo ,
probable that three and llll)'be all
four rA the .BI'OWIIII' pme~ In the
west will be almm on naUOIIII
,television. n- pme1 are Oct. 4
aSaillll the Rami~ Nov. 8at Denver;
Nov. lht San Ff'8ncllcoand Dec. II
atSeaWe.

"People from !be lelevlllon networb told me duriDI the league
meet1np tbat the Browna are eo&amp;
liclered 'aucllenct-bolden' becallle
rA all our dr8mllle, ia1kD1J1ate performlncel tbe Jut cOuple II
- ' I t , IIIICI tbat we've becGme tbe

.

The oauy Sentlnei-Paae-7

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohia

: '

Pei&amp;IUI .. ~:

'

�.

Pap-a-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeror-Middleport, Ohjo

Wednesday, April I, 19f1
____

Milwaukee takes, nothing for granted
B)'AIIocla.-Prm
.
niDgham. "Wehadstretcheaofvery
The Milwaukee Bucka have taken good basketball but we COUldn't
the home-i:OW"I advantage away sustain it."
·
from the Philadelphia 76ersin their
Philadelphia, which WliB led by
National Basketball Aasociation reserve forward Bobby Jones' 22
playoff series, but they aren't taking poiilts, was crippled by :IS turnovera
anything for granted.
although both teamsahotjust tO per"We can't get too eastatic about cent from the field.
winning in Phi1adelphia/' said
It was a game of spurts, and lt was
Milwaukee forward Marques John- the Bucks who had the decisive one
son, after the Bucks did just that by midway through the fourth quarter,
a 109-99 count Tuesday night to even outscoring Philadelphia 111-4 ln a
their best-of-seven Eastern Con- 4:09 span to tum an 8'7-82 deficit lnto
lerence lelniflnal at one victory a~Ilead. Four points by JOilea lif·
apiece. "It's just one game, and this ted tbe 76ers within three, but a
figures to be a long series. because three-polnt play by Bucks center
theae are two very good teams."
Bob Lanier with 3:03 left clinched
Anoiber very good team, tbe tbe victory. •
Boston Celtlcs, took a U lead ·over
Now the series shifts · to
Chicago in the otber East semifinal Milwaukee, and Marques Jolmson
by besting tbe Bulls 11J11.97. And in expects tbe 76ers to be eyen tougher
tbe West semifinals, both of which ·. tbe next time out.
opened Tuesday night, the Houston
Rockets defeated tbe San Antonio
CelU~ 108, Balls t'l
Chicago will have tbe home-court
Spurs 107·98 and tbe Phoenix Suns
whipped the Kansas City King.S 102- advantsge for Its nell two games
M.
against Boston, and Bulls Coach
Milwaukee was led by its for- Jerry Sloan will tske any edge be
wards, Johnson 'X Johnson. can gel after the .way his team
Marques Jolmson scored 22 polnts, played Tuesday night.
18 of them in tbe secoild half, and
Chicago didn't get a basket In the
Mickey Johnson added :IJl points, in- first five minutes, trailed 3~14 after
cluding 14-for-14 from the foul line, the first period, fell behind by :IS in
wbere the Bucks outacored the 76ers tbe second quarter and could never
45-25.
get out of that hole. Robert Parish
"They played 48 minutes of good, and Nate Archibald led tbe Celtics
consistent basketball and we with Z1 points apiece while Reggie
didn't," said 76ers Coach Billy Cun- Theus topped Chicago with 21.

,

KNOCKED AWAY - B011loo Celtica Cedrle Mawell, left, bas the baD
knocked away oo his drive to the basket by Chicago Bulls Dwight Jooes,
right, durlug fourth period NBA playoff actioa lu Boetoo Gardeo
Tuesday. Jones wu called fora foul on lbe play 81ld lbeCeiUcs went on lo
take the second game in the series 1111).97. lloslon leads in the series two
games 1o none. ~ AP Laserpbolo) .

Controversy
surrounds event
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) - A mild
controversy involving grass - the
kind you walk on or,in this case, putt
on - surrounds the start of the 45th
Masters.
The greens on the famed Augusta
National Golf Club course, site of the
event that begins a 72-hole chase
Thursday, have been changed to
bent grass.
It's generally consider,ed to
provide a faster putting surface than
the old mixture of rye and Bermuda.
The players' reaction has ranged
from the dsrk mutterings of older
competitors about trifling with
tradition - so important a part of
this event - to predictions that the
greens will he " fast, bumpy and
brown" to the ever-bright outlook of
Gary Player that in "a year of so
they'll be better than ever."
. Some players com plained
Tuesday that the greens were slower
then expected.
"They 're fast enough they
automatically eliminate half the
field," said another fanner winner,
Geor~e Archer.
"Bumpy," said Tom Watson, who
won this event in 1977, the season in
which he won the first of four consecutive Player.of the Year awards.

At least one effect already is
evident.
The change makes even more unclear the already obscure picture of
the likely favorites In tbe chase for
golf's most famous piece of clothing,
the green jack~! that goes to the winner.
At least two dozen men in the eUte
international, invitational field of 83
- 66 pros and 6 amateurs from the
United Stales, 10 pros 'and one
amateur from the foreign ranks appear to have a good chance on the
7,040 yards of flowered, rolling hills
that make up one of the world's most
beautiful courses.
Most attention centers on Ray
Floyd, Johnny Miller and Bruce
Lietzke, each a two-time winner this
season.
There's Watson, the outstanding
player in tbe game for tbe last four
years; two-time U.S. Open winner
Hale Irwin, one of the world's most
respected players and obviously
reaching a peak of perfomumce;
Ben Crenshaw, whose game would
seem to be ideally suited to the cour•
se; massive Andy Bean, capable of
hot streaks that make him virtually
unbeatable.

Fraud suspect
remains jailed

Local bowling
Mrireh 11, tNt
T"""
,IUe!M!J'sUsedC..n
Royal crown

"_,_,_
... ,...

Shirley'!! " 4"

Prol!lU'sGrocery

W, L.
48 24
11 24
M 28

32 Ill
PomerOyWlne81ore
24 II
Team!
,
11 M
. lndl.-1 hl(b pme - Jane Lombort 2111 ;
Belly Wblllattb Ill: Shirley M_,lJI,
,.,. hlah same - ruetoet'• lJiod c... 111 :
PomerOy \Vine Storo Ill; Pomeroy Wine Storo
til, Royal Crown Ill, Ue.
. lndlvldull hifh- - Bolly Whillatch ~ :
ISllirley M..dowolll: JW&gt;e l.ombert m.
; Teom high Hliu - Pomeroy Wine SlOre 1131:
· n.,alCrown 1113; Riebel 's U...tC.nl772

MIMII,llll

Team

AUGUSTA, Ga. AP) - Only a
shock of sun-bleached hair could be
seen above the pushing, milling
crowd.
" It's him," a small boy said,
tugging hard at his mother's hand.
"It's impossible - we can't get
near him," said the frantic mother.
"Sign here, Jack."
''Just one more, please.''
Finally, the figure ci Jack
Nicklaus, interference provided by
two anned guards, pushed through
tbe lll8S8 of humanity and found
refuge behind tbe ropes of the first

tee.
Then the 'world's greatest golfer
struck the ball with that mighty,
lunging swing of his and strode down
tbe empty fairway, his pillowy caddie Willie Peterson ambling abead.
There was nobody else in the
group. It was a onesome. It was
gladiator against the monster, an
unofficial tittle exploratory skinnish
before they open 'tbe gate of the
arena Thursday for real blood.
So the Masters Is ready to get under way - not just anotber golf tournament, but one of sport's great
specta'culars and classics.
Big Jack Nicklaus has become tbe
epitome of the Masters, a regal role
once reserved for tbe belt-hitching,
hard-charging Amold Palmer.
At age 41, nearing the senior
mark, his shadow falls over this
7,040-yard expanse like a sinister
cloud.
He remains not only tbe idol of the
spectators but the dread of his contemporaries - always the favorite.

By Sharon Michael

This is true although tbe freckled,
rust-haired Wataon has beaten him
out in the money race for the last
fourSrs.
Nl
us Is no longer moneyoriented. e Is major tltltHJriented,
holding a virtual matchless record
of 19 major champlonshlpa, including two U.S. amateurs.
He proved that the edge of his
game and desire remain sharp by
ROCKETS BALL- Mike Dauleavy (II) of tile Houlllll Roctealell
winning both tbe U.S. Open and PGA
out a holler u be oabl the bd beneath the SJIIIll bukelln lbelr Walen
crowns for a multiple time last year. Cooference NBA playoff game at San AniDnlo Taeldltyllflbt MUla&amp;•
Tom Watson has never won eltber.
play for the ball II San AniDnlo Span center George Jolmloa (521. Tile
The field, however, is strong and
HOUlton Reckets woalbll playoff opener, 1117·18. (AP Luerplloto).
menacing. Johnny Miller, who when
on his stick spews birdies like birdseed, ap. ears to have whipped a
nagging slump.
Big Andy Bean can take a golf
WASHINGTON (AP) - Because very unhappy."
course by tbe neck and choke It to the state of Romania interferred
The Karolys and POZ8ar filed for
death. Spain's Seve Ballesteros, ~ with the coaching of his prize- poUt!cal asylwn with tbe U.S. Imd~fendlng champton, Is an artist winning pupil, Nadia Comanec~ migration and NaturallzaUon Ser·
wtth any club. Walch out for Lee • Bela Karoly has defected to the vice last Thursday. A State DepartTrevlno, tbe Merry Mex, and putting United States.
ment official said asylwn is granted
whiz Ben Crenshaw.
That's tbe reason tbe 38-year-11ld in such cases 99 percent of tbe time.
Mainly beware of Ray Floyd, the Karoly gjlve Tuesday aftef defecting
The official said the Karolys left
frustrated onetime major leagu£ with his wife, Marta, and a colleague their 7-year-old daughter and Pozsar
basebaD hopeful who has won two from tbe Romanian national gym- left his wife and lnfant daughter In
tournaments this spring 8lld boosted nastlcs team choreographer Geza Romania. But they have Biked that
his money winnings to a first-place Poszar.
'
tbe Romanian goverrunent pennlt
$173,812.
.
tbe families to join them ~re.
At 38, 6-feet-land !00 pounds, be Is . The trainers were · quoted as
The officials said the Karolys and
bull-strong and bulldog-tough. saying tbeir decision stemmed from POZ8ar made the decision to defect
Augusta doesn't scare him. Five interference by tbe Romanian State in New York March 30, the Jut 11ay
years ago he subdued this rolling Central Federation of Athletics in of a four-week tour of the United
besst 'with a 17-under-par Zl1, tying Comanecl's 'career after her stun- States by the Romanian women's
Jack's record.
nlng success at tbe age of 14 in the national .gymnastics team and two
If Jack can't do it, it says here Olympics at Montreal in 1976. Sbe days after the tour was In
Ray Floyd will.
' won six medals tben under Karoly's · Washington.
Maybe, regardless.
direction.
"This interference with Nadia's
career led to ber widely pubUci.ied
decline between 1977 and 1978,' ·
Karoly told The Washington Post.
"The state left us alone until we
which squeaked into tbe playoffs in were successful.
"But once we produced a super·
18th place on the last night of tbe
star
they wanted to take ber away
llil8.80D.
from us," Karoly said. "Wben Nadia
N!~l~ls~~~
slipped, tbe state l1lllhed back to us, · ·
~
man goaitenders: the Blues' Mike asking us to take bet back. This
Uut, the NHL's best netminder, had exercise took place on three
81 appearances, two f~er than the separate occaalons, and It made us ·
Pengulns'GregMillen.
,---- -- - - - - - - l
In what alao should be quite a matchup, 1M Quebec Nordlques l!ke on:
the PhlladelpJtia Flyers. After an 11·
Lf'V!'S
.. '
26-13 record, the Nordlquea acquired
goalie Dan Bouchard from Calgary I
and turned It all around.

Nadia~s

W. L.

Royal Crown
M 24
Riebel's Ullld Con
II II
Shirley'a "4"
64 31
Pr&lt;IUI's Groc.
Ill to
Pm&gt;ororWineSI«o
10 lO
Teaml
II 10
lndlvidlllllilb pmo - 8otiJ Wbltlatch Dl:
Eunkolla!IJI4: llollfWblllatdiJIO.
Teom Iiiii - R. C. 'Ill: Pralllll'•
Grocorr
Iff; - · · u... Con • .
lndh-ldull ...., - 8ell)l 1111ttloldl . . :
Pol- • : ! a Abloi 11.1.
Jllih teun oorin - R. C. IIIII: Proi!Ht's
Grocery 1117: IIDI'•IIDI.

By AA~Iated Prm .
U Doug Jarvia finds a way in tbe
playoffs to do something no other
National Hockey League player
achieved during tbe season - stop
Wayne Gretzky - the 'Montreal
Canadiens center can share tbe
credit with, of all people, Gretzky's
f8 ther
~ Jarvis, Monlreal's bestchecking center, wa.s playing on tbe
Junior B level in Brantford Ontario
his coach was none other
Walter Gretzky. And It was at! the
junior level that Jarvis began to
master the defenalve akilla that have r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;1
earned him a spot on one of hockey's
top teams.
HEADQUARTERS FOR
"Gretzky Ia tough to defend against for a center," aald Jarvis, usually
a fourtb.Une player - except when
tbe· oppoeltlm features a dynamic
acorlng ceider. "Bill everybody has
a problem. He's alwa)'l the lillY who
starts the play, the guy who makes
the pus. Plua, be'll draw 1 lol of
penalties because be's covered 80
cloeel)'."
Edmonton pla)'l IIi Mllllteal
toni&amp;ht In - ol elgbt PJDel
openlas tbe NHL'a poeiMIOII

Sunrise service will be held at 6
a.m., jllason United Methodist Church With breakfast at tbe church
following tbe service.
The church choir will present
special singing at the worship serviceat9:45a.m.
Wrestllllg Matcb Friclay
MASON - Mason's reliC1Ill squad
is sponsoring a wrestling matcb on
Friday, AprlliO al8 p.m.
A highlight of the match is a 700
pound wrestling besr - four other
matcbes will follow.

Honored OD lllrthllay
CIJFTON - Mrs. Ann Williams
was honored on ber birthday with an
outing to Mountaineer Dinner
Theatre. Accompanying the bir·
thday honoree were Mrs. Denver
Blake, daughters, Jackie and Dawn,
Mrs. Blake's mother, Mrs. Clara
Williams, and Mrs. Sarah Willis of
Pomeroy.
HellmaD Speaks to Group
CIJFTON - Mts. Geraldine

Heilman of the General Board of
Global Ministries spoke to a group at
Clifton United Methodist Church on
Wednesday evening.
Sbe spoke on behalf of the M~
Curdy .Schools of Northern New
Mexico. The United Methodist Church attempts to meet the diverse
needs of this area through the
mission.
New Mexico reportedly ranked
49th in per capita InCome, high
unemployment rate and welfare
dependency.
Revival to lleglD

CLIFTON - A revival began at
West Columbia United Methodist
Church on Sunday, April 6, at 7:30
p.m. each evenlng and will contlnue
through April 12. There will be
special singing each evening.
Everyone ill welcome. Rev. Kenneth
G. Watkins ill pastor.
The Clifton United Methodist
Church women realized over $148
from tbeir recent bake sale and
homemade Easter candy sale.

How are your cancer dollars spent?

.

coach leaves

Gretsky's father helped, too

to the 1960s.
Smith, said Allison, ill wanted in
three Jurisdictions and ill at the center of a continuilg grand Jury in·
vestlgatlon of an alleged $21.3
million bank fraud Involving Well8
Fargo Bank.
In Municipal Court Tuesday,
Smith spoke only once to conflnn
agJ!n that his true name was Fielda
and that be was the fugitive sought
by authorities in Guilford County,
N.C.
.
Then he stood in ltunned slle~ u
Municipal Judge Pattl Jo McKay
disagreed with Mlchaell' contention
that the $200,000 ball belDg posted on
federal chargea would be aufflcleJt
to ensure Sml!h'l appearance for
furtber cow1 proceedlnga. The
judge also aet a hearing for May 7 on
tbe question of extradiUm to North
Carolina.

w-....yEarlyblrdl
SlclldJql

By Alma ManbaU

To SboW SUdes
MASON - The Rev. Kenneth
Watklna will show slides of his
recent visit to tbe Holy Laiid at
Mason United Methodist Church on
Monday, April 13, at 7:30 p.m.
Everyone Is welcome.
Munday Communion Service will
be beld by Rev. Ben Stevens. on
Thursday, April 16, at 7:30 p.m. at
Mason United Methodisl Church.

Sports World
.

Rev. Watkins christens,grandson
Cemlpoudeat
Cllrllleai Flnl Graudaou
CLIFI'ON - The Rev. Kenneth
Watklna had the honor.of christening
his flrat and only grandson on Sunday at tbe Clifton United Methodist
where be serves a.s pastor.
Chrlatened was Nathan WUliam,
two month old son of Mr. and Mrs.
stanley Baker of Sunberry. The
Bakers also have a daughter,
Heatber, age three.
The other proud grandparent is
Mrs. Kenneth (OUve) Watklna.
Rev. and Mrs. Watkins also have
two other granddaughters.

·

Cbalrmu
"How do you folks ·spend this
dollar I'm about to give to tbe
American Cancer SocietY?"
This was the question an
American Cancer Society volunteer
was asked last April during the
society's educational and fund
raiBing Cancer Crusade, .and sbe
was glad to give a detailed answer,
said Enna Cleland, chainnan of tbe
door-I&lt;Mloor Crusae of the 1981 event
now underway in Meigs County.
"We want everyone to know what
happens to tbe dollars it digs down to
give each year to belp defeat cancer '"she .declared.
.
"11lia year ACS budgeted more
than $149 million, of which ape
prodmately $117 million went into
progranliJ of reeearch, education,
service and rehabilitation, Cleland
said. Fund-raising accounted for 12
centa of each dollar, or $18 mllllon,
while management of the society's
aHalra took nearly 10 cents, or $14.4
million.
Research, which sbe said is
making steady gains agalnat cancer•.
received about 32 cenia of each
dollar, or about $48 million, ac-

Mason area
personals

cording to Cleland.
Patient 81ld. community services
such as tbe Reach-to-Recovery
program for women who have had
breast surgery; or tea~ people
to talk after they have lost their
voices to throat cancer surgery;
nursing and homemaking services;
transportation and fnaas screening
received nealry $29 million, or about
19 cents of each.dollar.
"Cancer prevention programs
!IUCh as those which seek to reduce
lung cancer deaths by encouraging
people to drop the cigarette habit
received about 16 cenia of each
dollar, or neary $25 millioti,"
Cleland said. Other programs in this
category aim at the earUer detection

of cancer.
Nearly 10 cents of each dollar, or
about $14.4 million, was allocated to
professional education. These
programs keep physiqans, dentiats,
nurses, and other medical personnel
updated on latest developments in
tbe diagnosis and treatment of cancer.
"In spite of severe inflationary
trends, we were able to keep tight
control over our administrative
costs and keep them · within acceptable limits," Celand commented. "We've held the line
through tbe efforts of dedicated
volunteers who give so generously of
time as well as money," Cleland
said.

On dean's list._ _ _ _ _ _ __
The dean's Ust for the winter quar·
ter at Hocking Technical College in
Nelaonvllle has been announced.
Making a perfect four point
average for tbe quarter were: SandraA. Keney, Pomeroy, and J01eph
Kuhn, Tuppers Plains.
Named to tbe Ust with a three
point or better from Meigs County
were:

Diana L. Evans, Long Bottom;
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Newland
have returned from a month's
vacation to Kingwood, Texas wbere
tbey visited their da~r and sonin-law, Mr. and Mrs. James D.
Carroll, Marcllllld Mattbew.
Mrs. Edith Fox, a former resident
of Mason and now of Pt. Pleasant, Is
a paUent at Holzer Medical Center.
Sbe has been removed from In-

John V. Stewart, Middleport; Matthew Weaver, Middleport;
Raymond Andrews, Ronald Cummuns; Thomas E. Hawley, Charles
Kennedy, Mark S. Moore, Paul N.
Smith, Donald Snyder, Susan J. Tu~
Ue, Wllllam K. Wolfe, Clara E.
Wyant, Shei;rle Starcber and Kenneth Wyant, all of Pomeroy; Susan
L. Tillis, Rutland; Penney G. Smith,
Racine; and Lila L. Young, Tuppers
Plains.

the Vednl Tropby for fend
goaliiUir_...ld this- wblle
Eclmnntm rulrld 1llb Cll .......
Olle 111111 th.l'a hid 110 i*IH"''
*"*be II tllllllfladiiW 8luleJ CUp
cf•'14111 New York hl"""n, wbo
1..t till NJIL'a Mit off.- willie
flnllblac atop till cmnl1 1111.........
Tile TelaMn take 911 ~
'

"'"' tree to use our

GAlS
The perso11al PJOrn~e r.ing
The perfect way to show you
care . Your name' on one aide·
and htrs on the other. Botlt
namn b~und· tosether by i '.
Sparkling Diamond .

(

;J ••

venltn12nd St. entrance."
Ph. "2-2148
124 w. M1in Pomeroy,

"1, Albert E. Mouse, being of
sound mind and body, (mostly)
do hereby leave to my Friend
Roach all of my worldly .
P' II lOIII, including my Swila
bal* account. (Whal better place
tobepSwill~?) ,
Tile Mel1 dreadtul thing has
bappened.. I knew this botbersome library would· bring
trouble' When humans get their
lads &amp;Gtlelber they come up with
such fooll.lb Ideas.
After finllbln8 my letter to the
P1P11' Jut net' I thoullbt long
IIIII bard a!IU what I could do to
._ D1rin1 the nl&amp;bt Jut night I
llna1l7 ramemberad that my
favorite boob are
lilllln my J'l
111111. '!bey on the boUom ahelliD my den; a
. coql± Ill of "LIW.
on
tile Pralrte." I 1D111t to make
flllm I 11ft to lbt diiJihl, ..

da•..,.....•

717 F

U'll«iJUNO-'l'IIIP
Ill
'I
...., • , •• • . - - II ·h11., ••
""
..
. .n.,
I'll,... .......... .....
r \ 1 llt?llfhtlm'l'lletl n ,... "?wwll

..... ...,A'

MAIN

, , .....

Rhorunaus, pastor of Tunnel and
Warren Chapel United Methodist
Churchea, Marietta. The Rev. Rhonmaus is a graduate of Asbury
Seminary of Wilmore, Kentucky.
Sbe was a former Instructor at
Greenville CoUege, Greenyllle. lll.
Music wilt be under tbe dirction of
Mrs. Terry Murphy and Mrs. Robert
Pugh of the Barlow-Bartlett Parish
Churches. Those attending tbe
retreat are to lake a Bible, notebook,

I

I

I

........................,," r

j

I ...... -

III$Wd,

lrle ....., • 111111 iiMl,

a " ,....... 1 r

~..

.. r e,c.

...... 1111. ...., Clnlp ...,, ......... .

Ga

n • ...,,,.,...,.... ~a ....... ...

a-

wt. I c:llmllld apaalbllbelf to

put them away, 1 'IO!ume of Nan-

cy Drew fell over on my tail and
now I'm trapped. How very
dreadful. '
At least I got all my books
carried.
Tile view from up bere is lovely
thOugh. Sbelveli and sbelves of
bOob, and they are all free to
btrow· Some new supplies
~;ived this week too and I can
IIi! them. Blue Eyes has moved
hir desk. - Why, tbere is Friend

For more infonnation on arteriosclerosis and hear! disease,
contact the Meigs County Heart
Branch at P. 0. Box 100, Pomeroy,
45769.

bed linens, comfortable clothes, a
covered dish and table service for

the evenlng meal on the first day. A
fee of $1 will be charged for those attending the Friday evening sessions
only,a fee of $7 for thOle attending
Saturday only, and a fee of $10 for
both days.
Registration fonns have been sent
to each local unit. They are to be
completed and returned to Mrs.
Carol Cottrill, Hamden by Aprl121.

,.

-----:-~--

-

.....

w~ both

go tuinbllng to the end of
the shelf and stop to catch our
breath. "Roach, you are truly a ·
good friend."
"Don't mention ll I say,
Albert, the old neighborhood has
really gone to pot. Just look at
this."
'This, Friend Roach, Is a
library, and I think I rather Uke

it."

''Go on home, Albert, and make
Roach.
some~· I will be along abortly.••
"Friend Roach? Friend
Two cupa &lt;#. spice· tea are
Roach!"
.
brewed
whtn roach fiDa1ly
"Albert, old chap, what are you
•
staggers
In,
all aut of breath and
doinC up t.blre?"
dragging ll"'lltiis·
"Prilnd liMch, please belp
"Friebel ~ wbat are you
liiii" My tail• eaucllt."
doing?"
Tbat'1 thi nice thing about
"Someone left a lit of your
ro.chea. They can acurry up
booU
up Cll that lbalf, but I
wa111 ever 80 fut.
carried
them aD badl dowiL"
"I say, Albert, you are In a
AI
Rolcb
.......... I c.a't
..,at, aren't 7011?"
belpwaidallel.,...._of
"Y-. 111111 Jill! wllf help me
Iii 11••! H - I bamallf pall I tlm)k I c.n pi ioole.
Sincerely, Albert E•..__
Ready? One, two, Now!" Free!

.

, .... :'PttlrllaiiW' ........... l*llllld "r ...., ......auc

~I

I

.

in Valadlum or l.OK
Yellow Gold.

• cautornil Straights
• Super Straights
(Also P,....1'Mn Sizes)

NlW YORK
aDrHiftG lOlSE
.

The study of arteriosclerosis is
part of the American Heart
Association's fight to reduce early
death and disability from hesrt
disease and stroke. "We know what
it is,'' Dr. Witherell said, "but we
don't know wlzy it happens. Only
through research can be learn this.' '
To help reduce your risks of ar·
teriosClerosis, the Meigs County
Heart Branch offers tbe followin~

suggestions:
- Have your blood pressure
checked, and if it's elevated, follow
your doctor's orders;
- Eat foods that are low in
cholesterol and saturated (animal )
fats ;
- Don't smoke cigarettes;
- Maintain a regular exercise
program;
- Reduce if you are overweight;
Have regular medical
checkups.

Adventures of Albert E. Mouse
Par!D

.

fatty deposits snd minerals. It may
cause a narrowing of the flow of
blood to the heart, brain and kidney,
Dr. Witberell explained. A sudden
reduction or stop In tbe flow of
oxygen-rich blood can result in heart
attsck, stroke or kidney failure.

•

Fashio~ed

MOORE'S

'

A spiritual retreat for United
Methodist Women of tbe Athens
District wllf be .beld at Camp Ot·
terbein near lAgan, Aprtl24 and 25.
Mrs. Everett McMahon urges
each unit of the the United Methodist
Women to be represented for the
retreat which will have as its theme
"Joumallng-Mapplng •OW' Inner
Journey."
I
Registration will lake place between 4 and .6 p.m. on April 24.
Leader will be the Rev. Sharon

FOR

'28

be beldfrom 9:30a.m. Willi t p.m. eacb day.

Reducing risk of hardening
of arteries
.

lfVI'S

AND .
BICYa.E PARTS

WClll

Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry HelehiB, Pomeroy.
There are sluffed toys, qullll, pOiows, Ea.ste~ novelty
Items, place mats, ceramic pieces, 81ld woodworilng
Items .U made at the Ceoter. Proceeds from the sale

wW go luto the local share of operaUooal monfe1. Mn.
Irene Cbrllty, right, Ia ooe of many acUve aenlor
citizens who wort on the craft Items at tbe Center. New
acUvitles director II Mn. Allee Wolfe, left, wbo aullll
the aenlor cltlzenslu tbeir craft acdvitles. The sale will

Athens UMW plans retreat._ _ _ _ __

yw; ·

ecramblt. .
Tile Clrwl!enl wtll be favored to
handle the 00., becaUie Of tbeir
superior defenllve akllll: Montreal

ANNUAL EASTER BAZAAR AND BAKE SALEA variety of handmade Items 8lld baked goods will be
for sale al tbe buaar Thursday·81ld Friday at tbe

"Hardening of the arteries is just
one of tbe many things In life we
don't understand, but something we
must learn more about If we are to
reduce tbe awesome economic and
bealth burden' of cardiovascular
disease," according to Dr. James
Witberell, president of tbe Meigs
County Heart branch.
Arteriosclerosis - tbe medical
term for tbe principal disease of arteries - ilia major factor behind the
nearly one million deaths in
tensive care at the hospital.
America from bear! diaease, stroke
Dinner guests of Mrs. Landon
and related diseases each year.
Smith on Sunday were Mrs. Sarah ·
hardening of the arteries is a
Spencer, Mrs. Matilda Noble, Mrs.
thickening
and loss of elasticity of
Joyce Carson, Ms. Ruth and tbe artery walls which may be due to
Elizabeth Mcintosh.
a buildup of a combination of tissue,
Mr. and Mrs. Sbennan Ford
visited over the weekend with their
daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Day at Pickerington.

EMBRACE
HER WITH ...
THE "f:MBRACE
RING"

=

BICYCLES

'

Meigs, Mason
Area Happenings

Phoenix, which IIIIo received a f1nt.
round playoff bye aftet winning Its
division, won rather handily..
Phoenix pulled away from a 51-46
halftime lead toani'T-l!Omargin with
8:01 to play .00 ~home. Included in that surge was a nm of 14
consecutive points and anotber 1-2
8purt in which all eight Suns polnia
were scored by Len "Truck" Robinson.

.

~

SaDa1ee, Kblp ..
While San Antonio l01t after
coming lif a niDe-day layoff,

Today's

By WW GrlmJiey .
AP Correspoodenl

.

·- : ~--· y ~ ..

PubUc IDformatloo

'

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Harold
Smith, tbe bearded boxing promoter
whose true identity as Ross Fields
was hidden until his arrest on
federal charges, remained in
custody as a judge added $200,000
state bail tohis$200 lXXI federai bail.
Smith 's attot ney, Robert
Michaels, said tbe second bail set
Tuesday in response to check
forgery charges in North Carolinll
made It unlikely that Smith would be
released from Jail immediately. But
Michaels expressed confidence
Smith's friends would continue to
stand beliind him and pledge their
properly as backJng for his release.
Smith's first PJ(),OOO ball was set
Monday after his arraignment on a
passport' falsification charge.
Aaslstant U.S. Attorney Dean
Allison wants Smith kept in jail,
saying his arrest record dates back

Reckets11n,SpunBI
. Houstori. still riding high after
knoctlng off the defending champion Loll Angeles LakeJ,"S, surprised
the Spurs at San Antonio behind 'll
, polnts by MOBeS Malone and 21 by
· CalvlnMurphy.
San Antonio led Zl·181atein thefll- .
~ quarter, but 15 IJeCOild..perlod
points by Murphy bel~ HOiiBIOn to
a ~ halftime lead and the Spurs
came.no cl01er than six after that.
• l'be Rockeia limited San Antonio
to 42.8 'Percent ahooting while hitting
50.5 percent tbemaelves:

1

._._,~

(0

,,
~

..

�• c.

'·
Wednesday, April&amp;, 1981

Page-1o-The Daily Sentinel

Area goings on.

,

ASTROGRAPH
.

Special meeting set

·A special meeting . of Pomeroy cepted will go to a training center
Cliapter 110, Royal Arch Masons, will away from home to leam an embe held at 7:30p.m. Thursday. Work . ployment skill and continue theJr
will be in. the most excellent master education. Every center offers the
high school equivalency diploma.
· degree.
While in .Job Corps, persons are
given free food, housing, medical
To have sunrise seroice care,
clothing allowance and some '
Poplar Riilge F.W.B. Church will spending money. A variety of skills
have an EaSter sunrise service for both men and women are• ofbeginning at 6 a.m. Pastor Miles fered.
Tlv~t invites everyone to attend.
Coffee and donuts will be served af- A rea honor rolls released
terwards.
The hooor roll lor the fourth six week!i ~ radirQI;
period of the HaniaonvUie Elementary School

Bucketeers to appear
The sophomore class of Eastern
High School will be sponsoring an
appearance by "The Buckateers" at
8 p.m. Friday in the school
auditorium.
The Bucketeers feature Archie
Griffin, showing his Reisman
trophy, along with Ray Griffin, Pete
Johnson and &lt;tiler professional
players who will be going against an
Eastern faculty team. Advance
tickets are $2, but tickets will be $3
at the door. The National Honor
SocietY will sponsor a dance
following the game.

has been annuunced by Principal Greg McCall.
Students ma kin t~ 11 "8" or above in all their su~
jel't.sund named to the roll were:
F ir~t ~ rad e - Lula Neece, Mark Stanley,
Jayl!on T11lis, Bobby Vance, Ronald Vance.
Second !ltHde - Gina Amott, Tina Arnott, Jen-

nifer Barret! , Burt Kennedy, Te resa King, Dian-..·
f1CI Mt&lt;:lelilmd , Amanda M1Jiden, Aaron Sheets.
Third Grade - Rodrie~ Butcher, K im~rly
Chapman. Derek Cremeans, Kelly Hamilton,
Danny Kennedy, Rebecca Napper, Roberta Na ...
!Jt!f , Ku nbe rly Parsons, Wendy Phillips, Debbie
Six, Ch ri&amp;opher Wandling, LindH Wya tt.
Fourth lifade - Christine Bass, Wesley
Howard , Jared Sheets.
Fifth grade - Scott Ober holzer, Do n ru~
Sc:rgent,Shirlena Si x.
Si, th grade - Jeffrey Amold, Susan Arnold,
l !ll:l rt }' Cline, Will y Molden.

New aqjval

Mr. and Mrs. Don Haines,
Syracuse, announce the birth of
their second child, Courtney Jessanjob Corp recruiter to
na, March 24, at the Holzer Medical
Center. The infalt weighed eight
be here this Thursday
pounds, nine ounces and was 21 inches long.
A Job Corps recruiter will be at
Grandparents include Anna
Pomeroy Village Hall from 9 a.m. to Haines, Pomeroy, Nonnan Grueser,
4 p.m. Thursday to interview poten- Syracuse, and Sylvia Carpenter,
tial applicants for a federally funded Portland. Mr. and Mrs. Haines have
program designed to better qualify a son, Nathan, 19 months old.
young people for employment.

Social
Calendar

Aprll9, 1911
You must be careful this
coming year • not to spend too
much lime worrying about things
which will never happen. Your

prospects are encouraging, so

think positively.
ARIES !March 21 -Aprll 19)
Don't make having your own way
so Important today that you

alienate persons who are in a

Don' t lump Into anything lm·
pulslve y, or you may later regret
it.
LIBRA (S.pt . . 24-Nov. 22)
Whether you like II or not, the
sPOtlight is apttobe on you today .
Those who observe you will do so
with e critical eye. Guard your
Image.
SCORPIO !Oct, 24-Nov. 22l
Just as you are entitled to your
views and opinions, others should
be allowed the same privilege
today. Don't force your Ideas
upon those who don't want them'
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) It's 1)05Sible yOU COUld have
enough trouble managing your
own affairs today without taking
on the headaches of others. Buff

By Mn. Fnlleil Morrli .

position· to helP you. Diplomacy,
not demands Is required .
TAURUS {April 20-May 20) A
negative alfllude will make
duties today doubly difficult( and
could also upset those who abor
at your side . ·
GEMINI (May 2l·June 20)
Keep a very llgnt rein on your
purse strings toaay . Think twice
out, not ln.
regarding to whom you make
CAPRICORN !Dec. 22·Jan. 191
loans. and avoid something for
Your lul:lgment may not be up to
nothing ventures,
its usual keen standards today, If
CANCER (June 21-July 221
you are forced to make decisions
There's a possibility you could
und~r essure. Don't become
experience frustrations today
trap
Into this eventuality.
both domestically and where
A UARIUS !Jan. 2D-Ftb. 19)
your career Is concerned. Strive . This Is nata goad doy to delegate
to be tolerant.
intricate tasks to persons you
LEO !July 2J·Aug. 221 Be very
know may not bt alile to handle
careful today that you don' t pass
them. Seek aid elsewhere.
on hearsay Information,
PISCES (Feb. 2D-March 20) Be
. espec ially If It could be detrimen·
very careful hoW you handle your
tal. Hear no evil, speak no evil.
mo.ney and resources today . Be
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) This
doubly wary If you're managing a
could be a questionable day in
financial · matter for another.
business and financial matters.
Both are critical areas.

Door-to-door campatgn
• begms
•

1

A special conununity-wide doortMoor campaign sponsored by the
Central Ohio Chapter of the Cystic
Fibrosis Foundation has been
scheduled for Chester in Meigs
COWlly.
The event is open to all youngsters
and adults who wish to help support
the fight against cystic fibrosis, the
number me genetic killer of
children and young adults in the
United States. There is no cure at
present for the disease, which af·
feels approximately one in every
1,500 births.
\
Hosting the event will be Phyllis

&amp;ster cantata set
An Easter cantata, "Tiie Last
Week" by John W. Peterson, will be
presented at 3 p.m. on Palm Sunday
at Trinity church.
Soloists are Joe Young, Helen
Wolfe, Jone Wise, Sharon Hawley,
Floyd Shook, Lois Burt, and John
Werry. Mrs. Hawley and Donna
Jenkins are the accompanists for the
cantata directed by Mrs. June VanVranken.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT UTERARY Club
Wednesday 2 p.m. at home of Mrs.
Richard Owen. Mrs. Nan Moore will
have the book review.
REVIVAL now in progress at
Chester Church of the Nazarene
through April 12. Services are 7:30 Dance club members
p.m. rtighUy. The Rev. Norman
. . . .
Taylor, Evans, W. Va., guest rece1ve mv1tat1ons
speaker. Special singing each
Members of the Royal Oak
evening. Pastor Herbert Grate inBallroom Dance Club of Meigs Counvites the public to attend.
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT ty have been invited to attend a danLions Club will hold regular ' ce given by the Cotillion Dunce Club
meeting, noon Wednesday, at Meigs at Belpre on Saturday, April 11,
from 9 p.m. to I a.m.
Inn.
Music at the Belpre dance will be
REGULAR MEETING Pomeroy
Chapter 80, Royal Arch Masons, and provided by the Gary Stewart Band
Bosworth Council 46, Royal and of Point Pleasant and dancing will
be at the new Belpre Shrine Club on
1Seiect Masters, 7:30 p.m. WedBlennerhassett
Ave. Those innesday. Work in the mark master
terested may write Howard Wolfe,
and past masters degrees.
928
Main St., Belpre, or call him at
ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING
423-8935.
of Meigs County Fox Hunters Assn.,
7 p.m. Wednesday at home of Corbett Cleek, Bald Knob Road; per- Revival underway
sons with questions call 949-2320 or
A revival ·is underway at the
949-2744.
Mount Urtion BaptiSt Church, on
THURSDAY
County Road 10, three miles west of
SPECIAL MEETING, Pomeroy Harrisonville, at 7:30 each everting
Chapter 80, Royal Arch Masons, through April12. Speaker is the Rev.
Th~, 7:30p.m.; work in most
Merlin Teets and there is special
excellent master degree.
music each evening. The public is in· REVIVAL 7:30 each evening at vited.
Mount Urtion Baptist Church, county
road 10, three miles west &lt;t
Harrisonville, through April 12.
Speaking is Rev. Merlin Teets and
Installation of officers highlighted
there is special music each evening.
the Tuesday meeting of the Pomeroy
. SECOND AND LAST meeting for TOPS OH 570 Club held at the Rock
Meigs High School jurtior and senior Springs grange hall.
parents interested in 1981 prom
Installed were Delores Long,
night activities to be held at 7 p.m. leader; Trina Faulk C!'leader;
Thursday in school library. Parents Francis Haggy, secretary, and
who have not yet volunteered but are Virginia Dean, treasurer. The 23
willing to held are asked to contsct members who weighed in at the
junior class sponsor, Dorothy meeting showed a net loea of 28 powtOliver, at school or at home, 992- ds. Helen Hill was the weekly queen
2570..
with Virginia Dean as her rwmerSOUTHERN IDGH School choir up. Members were reminded to
and band to be presented in a spring remember their secret pals and to
concern, 7:30 p.m. Thursday in high try for a no-gain week.
schoolauditoriwn; public invited.
ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE, 6:30 Car wash set ·Friday
p.m. potluck dinner, Hemlock Grove
Grange to visit. Baking and sewing
A car wash will be belli by the
contests cancelled.
Meigs County Adult Workshop of the
ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE, 6:30 Meigs Commurtity Cla&amp;!es from 9:30
p.m. potluck dinner. Hemlock Grove a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Friday behind the
Grange to visit. Baking and sewing Pomeroy Junior High Sehool. Cost
for cleaning the outside will be $1.50.
contests cancelled.

TOPS news reported

Dugan of 224 E. Main St. in
Pomeroy.
According to Thomas Turner,
executive director, those who wish
to participate in the event should obtain sponsor sheets and infonnatioo
from the local chairpers, schools, or
at other prominent locations
throughout town. Participants will
be contacting.thelr relatives, friends, and neighbors to help them earn
T-shirts and backpacks. Huffy Cor·
poration will be providing six tOSpeed bicycles to be awarded to
regional winners in the Central Ohio
Chapter.

Mental Health Board names
three photo contest judges
\Judges for the amateur photo con-:
test "Pictures of Mental Health"
will make their selections the last
week of April. The contest is being
sponsored by the Gallla.JacksonMeigs Mental Health Board.
"Best of Show" in each county will
be named. First, second and third
place ribbons and certificates will be
awarded to photos showing some
aspect of good mental health.
Judges are' Steve Keller, Jackson
CoWlty; Sallyanne Holtz, Gallia
CoWlty; . and the Rev. William N.
Middleswarth, Meigs County.
Holtz is Lifestyle editor for the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune and Sunday
Times-Sentinel. Her feature stories
are illustrated with her own

photogra'phy .
Keller
is
editor/publisher of the Wellston
Telegram. His photography credits
include a show at Riverby. Prior to
purchase of the Telegram; Keller
was art therapist at the Commurtity
Mental Health Center, Gallipolis.
Meigs County jucJge will be the Rev.
William N. MiddleswartJ1, pastor of
St. Paul's Lutheran Church and St.
John's Lutheran Church, Minersville.

Rev. Middleswarth ia an advanced
amateur photographer and has been
actively involved with mental health
services since 1975. He Is presently
chalnnan of the Cornmurtity Mental
Health Center Board.

Pahn Sunday processional here
This year, as in the past two years,
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church will hold a Palm Sunday
processionaL Those interested in
joining in the processional should
arrive at the church prior to 10:25
a.m. The procession will start in
front of the Edwards insurance office, will go around the block, and into the church. Palm fronds will be
given to everyone who participates.
·This year the processlm will be
led by a group playing brw In-

struments. This group will also accompany the choir during the morning anthem.
During the worship service the
sacrament of baptism will be administered, and members will be
received into the church,

Mike HaYman and son, Tate, of.
Gray, Tenn. spent a w~kl!11d with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. William
Hayman. He came especially to see
his grandinother, Mrs. Grella Simp8011, who. was a patient in Holzer
Medical Center and after her
discharge, he returned her to her
hOme.
Garrett Circle Is . a patient at
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Pl.
PleasB111, W. Va.
.
Mrs : 'Beulah Bradford ac. companied Mrs. Hazel Wickline on a
trip to see her m&lt;ther, Mrs. Laura
Sayre, who Is very Ill at Holzer
Medical Center.
Rev. and Mrs. Don Walker, Mr.

~Polly's

Receives commendation ·
Air Force Sgt. Milburn D. Taylor,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter R.

Taylor of New Haven, W. Va., has
been decorated with the U. S. Air
Force Commendation Medal at
Lowry Air Force Base, Colo.
The Air Force Commendation
Medal is awarded to those Individuals who demonstrate outstanding
achievement '
or meritorious service In the performance of their duties on behalf &lt;t
the Air Force.

OF;~
&gt;

•

meets- Thursday

~.,.J.,

The·Past Offcers 0! Raclne Chapter, Order of the Estern Slar, will
meet at 7:30 Thursday night at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb. ·
Members are to take a covered dish.

.

.

Family dinner Sunday
A family dinner was held Sunday ;
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wllaon
Carpenter. Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. John Young, Philip, Robin and
Usa, Lancaster; Jim and Jay Carpenter, Reedsville, Mrs. W. 0. Barnitz, Pomeroy, and Miss Patricia
Riley, Athens.

Flower BITI1llgemenls made by
members were featured In the
vari01111 rooms of the home of
Mrs. Arthur stlnner, holtesa for
a riieeting of the Middleport Garden Club recently. Special guests
were membel'll of the Middleport
Ameteur Gardenel'll•
MlaB Hallle Zerkle provided a
kitchen arrangement using a
large wooden boWl filled with
breads. In the master bedroom
was Mrs. Max Roller's
BITI1llgement of japontca and iris
In a blue bottle, while the family
room featured · Mrs. David
Bowen's arrangement of jonquils
in a large pewter pitcher. Pussy
willows and forsythia arranged

,.

'

by Mrs. William Morril were
used at bcith the outside entrance
and in the hallway.
Mrs. Pat Hl1l used red tulips
with an antique brw(h and
shaving mug in the bathroom,
while Miss Nellie Zerkle showed
an antique blgh top shoe with
light blue feathers and white
mums along with a favorite handkerchief of the ,late Mrs. David
Farmer, in the guest room. She .
also displayed a ·madonna
arrangement using small white
mwn8.
For the coffee table, Mrs. Carl
Horky arranged pink magnolia
blossoms while the dining table
featured Mrs. Michael Frye's
arrangement of jonquils and for-

sythla in a!l antique cryata1 bowl

with crystal ducks flanked by a
pair of four branched silver candelabra.
.
The gardenel'll' creed and a"
welcome to members and guests
. opened the meeting. It WBB announced that the Meigs County
Garden Club Association will
meet on May • with Mrs. David
Bowen and Mrs. Carl Horky of
the Middleport Garden Club to
present slides. The regular club
meeting was changed to May 5
with Mrs. Marcel Barton, horticulture chairman to have the
program. It was noted that an
ilfghan presented to the club by
Mrs. David Bowen, mother-In-

Health Review·
By Robert G. Sloetmal,
D.O., Ph.D,
Alllillut Pruf-r of
Family Medicine
Oblo UDiven~lty College
of 0.\eapathle Mediclne
QUESTION : I have a pain in my
chest every so often and I worry that
there may be something wrong with
my heart. How can you tell if chest
pain is caused by a heart conditioo?
ANSWER: Chest pain brought on
by physical activity or emotional
stress and relieved by rest and
relaxation is suggestive of heart
diseuse. In addition, when compared
with other types of chest pain, cardiac pain (angina) is usually felt unde the breast bone (sternum) . It often seeJ)III to radiate to the neck,
shoulder or inside surface of the left
ann. Th4!\.ensation often feels more
like pressure than pain and is com-

monly steady with only gradual
changes in intensity. Severe or excruciating pain lasting only a few
minutes Is rarely due to a heart
problem. Relief from heart pain
comes with several minutes of rest
and/or the use of nitroglycerin tablets' dissolved unde the tongue.
QUESTION : Can you explain in
more detail how non-heart related
chest pain differs from chest pain
duetoaheartcondition?
ANSWER: Chest pain that is not
due to a heart problem tends to be
more localized, having a shooting,
sharp, cutting or electric shock like
quality. It often fluctuates rapidly in
intensity alid can last from seconds
lO hours. A particular motioo or
position, or in some instances deep.
inhalation, coughing or sneezing
may irritate or aggravate the pain.
ReUef may occur dramatically in

seConds or slowly after prolonged
restandspecifictherapy.
QUESTION : What are some of the
causesofcheslpain?
ANSWER: When attempting to
identify the ·cause of chest pain, consideration must be given to aU of the
structures and organs conlsined
within the chest and in particular,
those related to the area of complaint. Thts would, therefore, inelude:
- Nerves, muscles, cartilage and
bones (neuritis, shingles, "puUed
muscle," rib inflammation, rib !raelute and spinal disease) ;
- The heart and ita vessels (cardlovascular disease, artherosclerosis, myocarditis,
pulmonary artery diseuse and aortic
aneurysm);
- Lungs and associated struclures (shortness of breath, pleurisy,

Danceaerobic
offered at FA C

C&amp;A AUTO REPAIR

Group raises $900
to purchase texts

•

320 Sth St.
Racine, Oh,
Ph. 949-2777

A group of parents in the ·
Southern Local School District
have through public contributions and the sale of
magazine subscriptions by
students raised almost $900 to be
used to purchase new science textbook.s for eighth graders at the
Southern Jurtior High School next
fall.
A few contributions are still
needj!d to meet the $900 goal and
anyone interested in the project
may send donations to the Racine
Home National Bank and they
should be clearly marked as
such. Anyone having questions
should contact Mrs. Carol
Adams, 992-2311, or Mrs. Donna
lhle,IH&amp;-2306.
· Latest contributors include Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Shuler, Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Bing, Mrs. Helen
Nease, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
' Alldre, Mr. and Mrs. 'Charles
~ Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wolfe,
Mrs. Irene Johnson, Mr. and Mrs.
Don Grueser, Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Ord, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Harris, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Beegle, Mrs. Role Deem, Mrs.
Nancy Adains.

The Education Department of the

A graduate of Ohio Slate University with her Bachelor of Science
81Ulounce plana for a series of four degree in Secondary Education,
weeks in Danceaerobics, to be Mrs. Doefflnger Is an inltructor in
taught by. Carol Sue Doelfinger of calisthenics and danceaerOblcs at
Culloden, vf. Va. Danceaeroblcs Is the Total Woman Figure Salon, Inc.,
an exercise program of dance and · at Winfield, W. Va. To lle an Injogging s\epll, choreographed to structor in Danceaerobics requires
music. It Is designed to strengthen being current in C.P.R., run an
and increale the efficiency of the eight-minute mile and elhlblt and
cardio-vascular system by building instruct danceaeroblc routine in a
up to a point of higlllevel activit)'.
two-day danceaeroblc Instructor
Aerobic refers to any activity that workshop.
l.ncreaaes oxygen Intake and blood
These Danceaerobic classe.l at
flow throughout the body. Mrs, Doef- Riverby will be given on Tuesday affinger has met aU of the Instructor ternoon for four consecutive weeks,
requirements for Danceaerobics, from 3 to 4 p.m., starting on
completing her training at the South Tuesday, April 21, 111111. The fee for
Charleston YWCA and her In- membrs Is S8 and for non-members,
structor training at the Charleston $10. To pre-register, call Janet
YWCA.
Byers at 446-1903 as soon as possible.
Limit for ciaBB has been set at eight.
F~ Art Colooy Is mosl pleased to

BEND AREA OPTOMEMETRIC CENTER
R. H. BILLMAN II, O.D.
Provides Such Services 'As

-

•

992-2920

Helen Help Us . ·

At least two representatives of the
Meigs County Board of Elections
will be at Eastern High School beginning at 8;t:i a.m. Thlll1day to observe citizenship day. Eligible
seniors will be registered for voting.
Any resident may .also register to
vote during this observance.
Registration for voting closes May 4.

BY HELI!lN AND SUE BUt tEl.
Corretpo.cleall

t

DEARHELEN : •
I've just come. ~ another
winter of "Button up warm!&gt;'' My
· perents think I lhould wear boclla,
mlttens and hood, piUII'II'e&amp;tera and
coat, even when It's hardly snowy. U
I were going to be outside a long
time, this would make 11e1111e, bull
only nlk fnm our door to the car,
then up the high schooll\eplllnto my
cJasarooma.
' Other ldda don't botber with all
lheee extru. It's embaiTIIIing
being the only girl In IIChool who
lllUit teke lime to 'ailed her bootlln
the morning, then put them oo when
my mother meell me lat..
'
lln't ICt-17 old enough to decide
how wum or cold I am? - AIL

THURS., FRI. &amp; SAT.
SEL£CT GROUP OF CONNIE' AND

F001M)RKS DRESS SHOES

30%0FF

SNOWED IN
Dl!lARASI:

Black. Wh~e. Bone, Taupe,
Red. Wine, Navy

It ceNinly Ill Parents lbould
lalock off the "lkll*ln .00 boot up
Wll'lll" I'OIItlne lbeut the time their
lddl llnow IIIGUib nat to Wide
tlnalb Icy puddlll Let'• hope
youn abed . . . ol their overproCecti- by winter. HELEN

I

CHAPMAN'S SHOES
"Next To Elbetfelds In PomenJ(

I

'

the Slnell was terrible, so I washed
Special OOI'ftlpoadeal
the rug with detergent While It was
DEAR POIJ.. Y - Please tell me still damp, I sprinkled baking soda
how to get formula. stains out of oo it and left It there overrtight. The
baby's clothes. I
next day, I vacuumed. Some of the
law of Mrs. Jean Bowen, was
really need 'help.
odor still lingered, but a second apawarded to Cindy Roush, West
- SARAH
plicatioo of soda removed it comColwnbla.
•
DEAR SARAH
pletely.- MARY
Mrs. Roy Holter, county con- Some years ago
DEAR POLLY - We all know that
tact chairman, Introduced Mrs.
a reader sent in a. ' .
when raisins stand on the shelf for a
Olive 'l'hompeon and Mrs. Janet
formula
for
while, they become hard and dry. To
Smith, consultants'for the Deco
whitening and
prevent this, I empty them into an
plant system. Mrs. Smith talked
removing stains
_ air-tight jar and pour in a small
on deco growing nOting that Mrs.
from white nylon ~
amount of brandy or wine. This
1bonipsOn Is the local consultant.
and synthetic fabrics that she had moisture is absorbed and-the raisins ·
Refreshments were served by
gotten from a university extension become plump and are more tasty
the hostessea, Mrs. Skinner, Ms.
service. Afterwards several readers when baked in muffins or cakes. Judy Arnold, MlaB Nellie Zerkle,
wrote that it was great for removing EDA
formula
stsins.
and Miss Hallie Zerkle. Mrs.
DEA8 POLLY - ~y dog has a
Soak
articles
in cold water. In a heart condi~on and has to take pilla
Heney presided at the' table.
plastic or enamel container mil one several times a day. I always
Members and guests loured Mrs.
gallon
of water, one cup dishwasher dreaded sticking my finger down his
Skinner's antique fumlshed ho{ne
detergent
and one cup of water sof- throat, 'but he would keep spitting
to view the arrangements in each
tener.
Stir
with a wooden spoon. them out. Now I put the pills in some
room.
Completely subnlerge garments and peanut butter, which he happily
snak about three hours and then licks off my finger or a spoon. wash a!l usual. - POIJ..Y
DIANE
DEAR POLLY - Those mothers
Polly will send you one of her
who have infants learrting to walk signed thank-you newspaper coupon
will find it helps to put those rubber cUppers if she uses your favorite
bathtub awliques on the bottom, of Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
their shoes. Cut a piece big enough to column. Write POLLY'S POINcover hoth heel and toe. Thts helpa TERS in care of this newspaper.
prevent baby from sliding and
falling . I also put them on the bottom
of the high chair and the car seat. collapsed lungs and pulmonary em- JOYCE
To conduct revi'tal
bolus); and
DEAR POLLY - My three-yearThe Rev . William King ,
- The digestive system (G.I. old accidentally spilled milk on a rug
evangelist,
Point Pleasant, l&lt;'ill be
tract) including the tisophagus, · and forget to leU me. In a few days
conducting
a revival at 7:30 p.m.
stomach, small intestine, pancreas
Friday, Saturday and Sunday
and gall bladder ("heart burn,"
evenings at the Bible Methodist
hiatal herrtia, gastritis, stomach and
Bake sale set Friday
Church, Rutland. The Rev. Glen
duodenal ulcer and lnflammatioo of
the pancreas or gallbladder).
The Salvation Army Home League Wickard, pastor, invites the public.
It is possible for chest pain to be a will hold a bake sale at Warner's In- , - - - -- -- - - -result of emotional rather than surance Agency, Main St., Pomeroy,
physical causes. Arudety, stress, Friday, 9:30 a.m.to no on.
hyperventilation, as well as neurosis Homemade bread, bWIS, pies, cake,
should, therefore, also be CO!)o and a variety of candies will be for
sidered.
sale. Thti proceeds from the bake
From this list it should be ap- sale along with any gifts will go into
parent that the causes of chest pain the Easter missionary offering.
are,many 8nd varied. Final iden- Each soldier practices a week of
tlfieation of the specific cause may self-&lt;tenia! during Holy Week laying
require complex testing techniques. their gifts on the altar at the 10 a.m.
Pleue see your physician to allay service on Easter Sunday. The
your concerns and to obtain a proper public is invited to attend the Easter
diagnosis and treatment.
servil'es.

High school
reunion planned
in Pomeroy
Dick Hawkins and the All Star
Band, Huntington, W. Va., have
been booked to play the dance for the
·annual Pomeroy High School Alumni Reunion.
Tickets for the reunion went on
sale tody at the New York Clothing
House and Swisher-Lohse Drug
store and are f/ per person. Only 4!iO
people can be acconunodated at the
lianquet which has been set for 6:30
p.m. on May 23 at the MeiiiS ·High
School Cafeteria. The banquet is
open to alumni and their spouses.
The dance following the dinner will
be open to the general public. Reservations must be made by May 20.
Joe Slnlble will emcee this year's
reurtioo and reurtion classes start at
1916 and will include those at five
year intervals through 1966. Letters ·
have been sent to alUmni residing
out of the county and to reWton clasa
members.

Song/est on Sunday
The Pomeroy Seventh Day Adventist Church will hold a songfest
beginning al 2 p.m. Sunday. All
llln&amp;ers and the public are invited.

Parents can ~arry
Poster
winners
named
'button up warm ' to
extremes sometimes

Rider completes basic

'

Sharp
pain
usually
not
hea_rt
problem
,

$45.65 Until May 1
*Disc Brakes Include:
replace pads. turn rotors,
pack bearings, new seals,
road test.
*Drum Brakes Include:
replace front shoes, turn
drums, pack bearings,
new seals, road test.
Plus our everyday low
·price for rebuilt automatic
transmissions, on most
American made cars.
Parts &amp; Labor $225.00
plus fluid

CHAPMAN'S PRE-EASTER SALE

I

.

FRONT BRAKE
. SPECIAL

OPEN M.-T.-W.-F. 9-S
CLOSED THUR.-SAT.-SUN.
113 Court St.
Pomeory, Oh.
Above Clark's Jewelry in Pomeroy

'

By Polly Cramer

by Dennis Mopre.
Nancy
Merrrifleld gave devotions. Next
meeting of the class will be held oo
April :II and will be .hosled by Kenoeth and Jeannie 'uckley. Games
were played and refreshmenta served by Dennis and Kathy Moore.
Others attending the meeting were
Larry and I.Jnda Fields, Kevin and
Andy, Tamml Buckley, Richard and
I.Jnda Friend, Michelle, Eddie and
Jennifer, Andrea, Amy and Jarrod
Moore, the Rev. Stanley Merrifield,
Marcy, Todd and Buff!, Bill and
Stephanie Arnott, Jason and Shawn,
and Randy Dudding.

Board of elections to
have members at school

Navy Seman Recruit Ricky W.
Rider, aon of Frederick C. and Verdie M. Rider of Route 4, Pomeroy,
has completed recruit training at the
Naval Training Center, Great
Lakes, Ill.
He is a 1980 graduate of Meigs
High School.

.

meeting which opened with prayer

VISION EXAMINATIONS .__
HARD AND SOFT CONTACT LENSES

Pointers

Mrs. Arthur Skinner's home. features Baby clothes stained
arrangements by garden club members

. and MQ. Roderick Grimm, Mrs.
Doris Hensler, Mr. and Mrs. Unley 1
Hart attended ijle Rio Grande 1
Association at the Finlt Bapti!t
Church at Jackson.
The birthday of erttt Bradford, u,
was celebrated at the home of his
son-In-law and diughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Herman Carson at' Coolville
· Sunday, March 15. Attending were
Mr. and Mrs. Crltt Bradford, Jr. of
Worthington, Mrs. howard Frank
and Lois, Mr. and Mrs. Crill Bradford, Sr., Racine. '
Mr. and Mrs. TOIIIIIl)' Curtis and
Lin8 of Texas, Mrs. Marcia Ann
Wells of Washington CH and Mr. and
Mrs. Sam Curtla of LOrain spent
seveal days here due to the Illness of
their father, Harry Curtis.

Mother-daughter banquet
A mother-daughter banquet to be
held on May 8 at the Asbury United
Methodist Church was planned 1
during a recent meeting of the
YoungAdultClassatthechurch.
While the main course will be
provided by the clasa, covered
dishes are to be brought by the
others. Hope Moore was named
chairman of the banquet commlttee.
Kenneth Buckley presided at the

The Daily Sentinei-Page-11
2

Racine Social Events

.

The program is free job training
for persons 16 thro\lgh 21. Those ac-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday. Apr111,1981

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

''

Wlnnel'll in a poster contest held at
the Pomeroy Elementary School in
conjunction with the Magic Fantasy
Revue are being announced.
The Meigll Athletic Booeters, who
Bilged the show, sponsored the C()Do
1e1t with free tickets awarded as

ASI:
As for "You'll catch your death of
cold," which 1ll1lally goes hand and
glove with "If you don't button up
warm ..." Bootlesll and unmufflered
ldda stay just as healthy u the bundled-up bunch. I selckim caught the
inlflle1 while I wu growing up, even
- maybe "P9CI•IIy - when I ran
next door barefoot all winter long, SUE.

(NOTE FROM HELEN: I

could

~:~~=t~
too am heppillt barefoot.)

RAP :
I blw to acree with "NIIalle"
~ t11e
ot IUJ)tl'lllll'bt clleckeR. If you're
n1ce looldna. they don't treat 1011
well.
.
All my life rve been told I'm
J.llllful, lbDulb I dao't - mylllf
tltlt ny. I alW.,.Iry &amp;o he ldDd &amp;o
cllrb, maD 1111111 talk aad ldd
ll"tllllld. But ..-y llldam Ita" l'mr
aottea lclod tnatmeat from
, . . . l"'tJ d, ..., pw 1111 eald

nxsen.

..... ....... .... downrilllt

n•••·
MID cllrb ueldlldir. - UI.R.
/I.

prizes.

Winnel'll are : kindergarten,
Trevor Hafrlaon. Megan Bartela,'
Shannon SpaWl, Jennifer Barnhart;
grade 1, Shon Loquuto, Tammy
Klein, John M. , Harrison, Mindy

fl
.

Foulirod; grade 2, Eric Hayes, Lisa
Capehart, Tedd Wiles, Pepper
Perrine; grade 3, Shawn Durst, Jenny Buck, Jeff Smith, Nancy Baker;
grade 4; Jeff Stone, Peggy Rdbntre,
Toby Hyaell, Carolyn Elam; grade
5, Todd Ackennan, Dreama Bentz,
Dellnla Harris, Tollha O'NeU; grade.
·I, Duane HoweU, Jennifer Coo,tch,
Jeff Holtz, Patty Ward; EMR, bee
Shane, Danny Carl, Cathy Laudermllt, Mary Morton; L.D., Jeannie
Terry .00 Roger Snyder.

p;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii,~iiiiiiiiiiif1

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.
'VETERANS MEMORIAL HOS~ITAL
EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GEJIERAL M.l.ERGISJ

Eckrich

OLD FASHION LOAF .••••.•••~~}1.99
PICKLE LOAF..................~~·•• $1.89
Homemade

HAM SALAD •••••••••••••••~~~ .... $1.39
1 lb.

Limit of 4

Teen Queen

MARGARINE
Fairtield
Old &amp; Sharp

20 lb. Maine Eating

2/99~ POTATOES
Quarters

Lb~2.29

Bag

$3
•

s lb. White

GRAPEFRUIT.-.~~~..-~ 1.25
CANeBwBAGE .. ·•·•••••

.~~J g*

WELCH'S GRAPE JUICE ••. 2/$1.19
17 01.

ARGO PEAS .•.••••••••••••••••••• 2!7'1
15'12 oz. Hunts

•

MANWICH
•· •••••••••••••••••••••••••·
uv, oz. Del Monte
CRUSHED PINEAPPLE .•••• 2/51.29
103!4 oz. Campbell's

CHICKEN STAR SOUP ••.••••••
2/6'1
.
9'1, oz. Star Kist

TUNA FISH ....................... }1.79
16 oz. Lucky Leaf
gc
APPLE SAUCE····-................ ~
32 oz. Wagners

ORANGE DRINK ....·................GSC
2201. •

pHice Ho•• by Appointment Only

COFFEE MATE..............·........ $2.39

CALL (614....2·2104

Or (304)'675-1244
••

'

�I

Wldnesdn, Apriii,W!

Commissioners remain status quo
on two Meigs departmental strikes
The current status of two strike:~
by two grouP! of county worllera.deputy sheriffs and ~hit county highway department worker..-as far as
the Meigs CoWJty Commissioners
are co.ncerned was reflected
Tuesday.
Meeting in regular session, the
commissioners stated: "The
disagreement at the sheriff's office
does not Cl)ncem the board. . It
remains a· problem between the
sheriff and his emplayes".
Deputies continued their picket
line in front of the courthouse and

•

countY jall today, their strike having ,
got underway one week ago today.
At the conunlasiOI)efS meeting, it
was reported that the county highway department negotiating team's
last offer before negotiatiOilB broke
off, still stands. That offer, the bosrd
states, was for $1040 per employe a
year plus major medical benefits.
County Engineer Pbil Roberts
stated that he felt the offer presented to the workers was a fair one and
the maximum that could be made
within this · year's department
budget.

· Meantime, highny worten continued their picket lines. Tiley are
~ the highway gBi'8fle 011 the
fairgroUIIda and at the county-owned
landfill, near the ~
Road. The landfill haii been cloeed to
aU haulers since lailt Tbunct.y 88
the result of the picket Une at the !atter location.
'
The cornmi&amp;slonen alao pe•eed a
resoluUon agreeing to cooperate
with the Department of Transportation !vi the improvement of
railroad pevement markings at
crossings inside the county.

Television
•

VIewmg
EVENING

a:oo

CAROL BURNETT AND •
FRIENDS
ABC NEWS
3-2-1 CONTACT

~

OVER EASY 'Diabetes' Ho st:
Hugh Downs. (Clo sed-Ca ptioned ;

U.S.A.)
6:30 illi i C!J NBC NEWS
(]) 30 MINUTES WITH FATHER
MANNING
BOB NEWHART SHOW
FA~ THE MUSIC
(I) IE) CBS NEWS
CIJ WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
liD ULIAS, YOGUND YOU
II ABC NEWS
6:58
Q_BH UPOATE NEWS
7:00
II PM MAGAZINE
()) SEND FORTH YOUR SPIRIT
CD CIRCUS WORLD CHAMPION-

CAPTAIN EASY
Wf~AT IN

lflA2.~!'

JU!I'I' WHAT 1'1' !IOOND~ LIICE.
YANIC~e; E!OY~ DID 'IOU ~TANO
'THERE 51MPERIN6 COYLYDOitvG 'IOUiil I!AS.~FUL
HE -MAN ROUTINH

D'YA

MI!AN-- ~0'11'0

. I "REACT TO
THI~ "INDIAN

TEMPTRE~~·Ii

OR DID THE
THOUGHT OF ..
ALL THAT OIL
MOIJcY BRIIJG
OUT THE OAF Is-H DON JUAN
IN YOU1

OH--Y'M~AN

DID I &amp;AY "Y~S .
DARLIN6-- I'M
'IOUI&lt;S FOREVER"!
AND SWEEP HE"R
INTO M¥ CRU6HING
EM~ RACE--

W

~

Investigator. • ~-------"(Con::::::::tin::::u::::ed:..::fro::,:m:;.!pa!:::g~e.:..:.l):..,__ _ __.;_
GRAIN Jtl.EVATOR EXPWDES- One of 1he 25
peraoDB Injured In today's grain elevator e1J1loslon
Corpus Christl, Tel88 Is !rented for burns In the

foreground 88 the elevator cootlnues to burn In the
background. At the last official report three perso111
werelmowndead,twoweremlssing.(APLaserpboto).

Meigs County happenings.
Mayor's Court Change concert time
Six defendants forfeited bonds in
the court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews Tuesday night. They are
Preston Parsons, Racine, $30,
posted on a left of center charge;
Vera Thompson, New Haven, $26;
Pamela Theiss, Racine, $27; Ariella
VanOver, Syracuse, $26; George
Grogan, Point Pleasant, $27, all on
speeding charges, and Eddie McClure, Letart, $100, public intoxication.
Two defendants forfeited bonds
posted on charges of driving while
intoxicated and a third was fined on
that charge in the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Marvin L. Fife, Cheshire, and
Dale L. Jones, ·Terra Haute, Ind.,
forfeited bonds of $350 each on the
charge. Michael Taylor, Middleport,
was fined $225 and costs and was
given a three day jail sentence.

Mrs. Lee Lee, vocal music supervisor of the Southern Local ·School
District, reports that the time of a
choir and band concert to be staged
in the Southern High Auditorium
Thursday night, has been changed
from 7:30 to 8 p.m.

Bloodmobile visit
The Red Cross Bloodmobile will be
in Meigs CoWJiy April22. It will be at
the Senior Citizens Rooms in
Mulberry Hts. from 1:30 to6 p.m.
Volunteers are needed so others
will not have to work tbe whole time.
New donors are welcome as some
donors are getting to the age they no
longer can give. More blood is
needed in our hospitals every day.
Meigs County did very well at the
last visit so let us keep up the good
record on Apri122.

Packet pick-up set

Tree packets ordered from the
Chicken barbecue
Meigs Soil and Water Consj!rvation
District
are to be picked up Friday·,
A chicken barbecue will be held
April
10,
from 2 to 5 p.m. or SaturSunday, April 12, at the Pomeroy
day,
Aprilll,
from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Fire Station beginning at 11 a.m. unThey
are
to
be picked up at the
til all food is sold. Dinners will be $3.
District
office
located in the FarThe event is being sponsored by the
mers
Bank
building.
If there is no
Pomeroy Fire Department.
rain they will be outside in the
parking lot, otherwise they will be in
Senior citizen trip
the office.
·
The Senior Citizens Center is sponsoring a trip to the Charleston Civic
Center for the matinee performance
of the Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus, Saturday,
A retired Gallia County teacher is
Aprilll.
listed in critical condition today at
Cost for transportation and ticket St. Mary's Hospital in Huntington
to the circus is $12, there are still a where she was taken following a
few seats available. Following the
performance there will be a stop for
dinner at the cost of those attending.
For additional information call the
I Continued from page I )
Center at 992--2161.
2 and a golf tournament for members will be held at Jayrnar Golf
Declaratory Judgment Course
April30, beginning at 1p.m.
A declaratoy judgment Willi filed
Introduced as a guest was Dale
ln Meigs County Common Pleas Rothgeb, Jr.,news editor of The
Court by Clyde Sanders, Rt. I, Reed- Daily Sentinel. Rothgeb said The
sville, et al, against Carl Smith, Inc., Daily Sentinel is striving to do a ~t­
Sandyville, W. Va .
Ier job and trying to improve its
The judgment is concerns proper- product with more in-depth local
ty leased for oll and gas rights for a news.
primary tenn of three years. AcAttending were Jim Frecker,
cording to the entry the three years president, John Anderson, Miller,
!lave lapsed.
Rothgeb, Simon, Crow, Billy Joe
Spencer, Thereon Johnson, Dale
Warner, Fred Morrow, Bob Miller,
Plan work session
C. E. Blake~~lee, Hank Cleland, Joe
Shade River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM will Clark and Joe Young.
meet Thursday, April 9, at 7:30 p.m.
at the lodge hall in Chester. Work
will be in fellow craft degree.

•

Emergency ru·ns
Three calls were answered by
local emergency squads Tuesday,
the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services reports.
At 10:55 p.m., the Rutianl! Unit
took Shelby Davis from Hysell Run
to Pleasant Valley Hospital; at 11:36
a.m., the Pomeroy Unit took Eliza
Wolfe, Texas Road, to Veterans
Memorial Hospital and at 6:45p.m. ,
the Syracuse Unit took Alberta Hubbard from Second St., to Holzer
Medical Center.
Four emergency calls were answered by local units Monday, the
Meigs Emergency Medical ~rvices
reports.
At 7:24 p.m., the Pomeroy Unit
took Cathy Pierce from W. Main St.,
to Pleasant VaUey Hospital; the
Rutland Unit at 12:24 p.m. took
Callie Matheny from county road 1
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; the
Middleport Unit at I :13 p.m. took
Gerald Brown from Meigs Mine I to
Holzer Melli cal Center and at 2:44
p.m. treated Keith McCarty at the
residence at the intersection of
Routes 143 and 7.

Free clothing day
The Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency will hold free clothing
day for low income persons fr001 9
a.m. to 12 noon Friday. The agency's
clothing bank is located in the former high school at Cheshire.

auditor's
contractedbudget
again. until be could be
"We ch~ked and can find no in-

cidents of people in any auditor's of-

~~~ or:S~:'ott~ea:~;

their adding machines. Last year,
102 officel'l! of the law were killed
aCI'OBS the nation. We need more
money and benefits to make this risk

a little more bearable.
"In a few days another article will
be written on another county office
to infonn citizenll of Melga County
what really goes on with their tu
dollars".

SHIPS The world 's premier big·top
performers compete in lour ce·
tagories : tri ck riding , juggling ,
trampoline and flying trapeze .
ALLIN tHE FAMILY

BORN LOSER

IOOW! '{C\J OIDI.I'T
.S'C.ORl::- AT ALL !

CliHord R. Hayes, 69, Route I,
Long Bottom, died Tuesday at the
Pomeroy Health Care Center
following a Ungering Illness.
Mr. Hayes was born in Chester on
Feb. 7, 1912, a soo of the late John B.
and Lucy F .• Lane Hayes. He was
also preceded in death by his first
wife, Elouise Price Hayes, in 1977,
and by a brother, Gilford Kenneth
Hayes.
A member of the Middleport First
Baptist Church, Mr. Hayes was a
salesman for the Rich Valley Dairy
Co. He belonged to Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legioo.
Surviving are his wife, Thelma
Biddle Haye~~, Long Bottom; a son
and daughter-in-law, John Gregory
and Cynthia Hayes, Middleport; a
stepsoo, Frank Case or Middleport;
a granddaughter, Amber Nicole
Hayes, Middleport; two siaten and
brothers-in-law, Helen B. and
Charles Woode, Dayton, and
Mildred Fern and Frank

em

~

World War II and the Korean War in
Las Vegas, a proless [onal ro ller
skating team tea ches Sarah Pur·
cell to skate, and an interview with
a woman wh o produ ces a line ot
custom made bikini s t or men and
women . (Repeat ; 60 mine .)

ANNIE

THAT OETECTIVE IG
CHASIII' HIM!

Mason County gets $511,447

Hospital news
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES APRIL 1
Catherine Baker, Belva Campbell,
Anthony Carpenter, Chester Carsoo,
Herbert Cassell, Josef Clendennen,
Thomas Daniels, Walter Danner,
· Teresa DeLong, .Tonia Dill, Starla
Franlllln, William Hamiltoo, Elisha
Jacll!on, Joahua LewiJ, Melody McPheanon, Sylvia Mooney, Richard
Myers, Hue! Norton, Charles Randolph, Della Reynolds, Cralg Saylor,
Jayce Sbarp, John. Sprouae, Courtney Swango, James Taylor, Slacey

Wella, Mart Wllaon.

Veterans Memorial
Roush, Muon;
FJ'IIier, Chellllre; Leona

Admi~Ray

wuu.m

W1DDin1,

LGeMr7,

New Haven;

Helen

PwneJoy; Emma Rad(Grd, r.-oy; Connie Franclaco,
W..; Ella Wolfe, Poone1 oy. ·
Dlldlm'led-Juanlta Chapman,
Fred Mild, JOieplllne Jllltice, Anna
111rt, Mlbel Swan, George Dean,
William ll'rlller, Ray Roush.

State Auditor Glen B. Gainer, Jr.,
West Virginia, announced that his
office mailed final dlstributioo of
public utilities monies collected by
his office to the counties and
municipalities of the state.
Total distribution was
$24,m ,732.77. Of the total,
$23,313,045.38 was for coWJty and

school p~ and$1,198,687.39 for
municipalities. This is an increase
over the final d!Btribution for last
year of $1,252,753.45.
Mason County received
$511,447.37 ; Hartford, $276.78;
Mason, $780.52, and New Haven,

claine and Tom Jones star in th is
dazzling musical spectacular, fea ·
turing the Lido' s Bluebell Girls .

CllMDVIE-(DRAMA)"""' " On tho

ALLEYOOP

MOOP

SMALL 'Plenty To Grouse About '
Thereia illness and trouble on Lord
Livingstone '&amp; grouse moors. (60

Connie Walker reported 011 a
lefllllatlve conference held in
Columbul, attended by her and Bet.
ty Halraton.
The nut meetin8 will be April 211
at G•llfpolil with John Fuller of the
Baird and Fuller Realty in chuie of

Eleaur meet again, but to no avail.
The war will goon.Finally, the ramp
is com ple te and an assault tower
heabeenbuil1, with a battering ram
to shatte r Maaada ' s protective
wal l. Eleazar gather s his people
together and presents his final plan
to deprive the Romana at thei r vic·
tory, Stars: Peter O' Toole , Peter
S'trauu . (Conclusion; 2 hrs .)
(Qioaed·Captioned; U.S.A.)

Heand Rufus
are helpinq

Some•
ones

~r'"" I

8 (I) IE)

CBS WEDNESDAY
NIGHT MOVIE 'Herd he! And Lege'
1979 Stars: Kevin Dobl!lon .~haron
Gina .
CIJ SOUNDSTAG~ ' An E•ening
With Roberta FLack' The inimitabl8 ·
Roberta Flack stars in her first na -

working to as sure that the! argeat of
the great apes, the gorilla. will not
fall victim t o e xtinction . {60 min11.)

~moRE~W

CONetJElD, WilY ISN'T

)QJR MOTHER AT 'IHE
AOPR~ ')O(J GAVE
US? ~D WHY HAS

shop the bargains
in the
·(

----? .....\

6ECAU5E l NEVER
(.IVEP

lHERE! NEITiiER

1/117 SHE!

!. .. L DON'T

10:00 ill&amp; C!l OUINCYToslop crime ln .
their neighborhood two brothers
organize a vigilante committee, but
It is onl~ •tter one ol them is sla in
that the survivor will listen to
Q!Jincy's advice . (60 min a.)

KNOW WHO {IIY

M:JTHER f6l

NO ONE HfAAJl OF

Cil THEY WRITE THE SONGS:
'YIP' HARBURG Thle program fea-

HER"

~

tures songwriter Yip Harburg singIng hit melodlealrom 11uch works aa
'The Wizard of Oz ' and diacuaaing
such diverae stage personalities
11 Judy Garland and the Marx

1D: 15
1D:28
1D:30

(

~Bro~::VENING

NEWS
CBN UPDATE NEWS
"·
MAX MORRIS
PIAF, BR£LANOLE BRUNThis

program featuresainger0enil8 La

Brun performing the music of her

PAW AIN'T OVERLY
FOND O!= COLD
SOOP, PARSON

MV DADBURf\1

CALL TODAY FOR HOME DELIVE·RY

THERE'S ACARRIER NEAR YOU!
6ET OUT THE.
TARP. ANI7 COVER
THE INFIELD~

The Daily Sentihel
-1

IJ

Ij l. 1\~
11[1

[]~
·

~

announced .

AIC CAPTIONED NEWS
IIOYIE-(CRIMEl"l'l "Young
Q_lilnge&lt;" , 11415
'11:46 CiliiOYIIHCOMEOY-WEST!RN)
41
\
••
'T'IWM Ouna For TeUII"
12:00

~Yli-(TIIIIILLERI"\Io "TM
~- LOYEIOAT-POLICE

, "1.-o

ITOfiY Lowe Boet: •Trea Amlgoa'
VIcki and a boy, traveling with hi I
pa111111,try to help out a alowaway.

Pollee Story: 'A Gamo'OI LON' A
avoid getting In lroubll wlthlhelaw .

I

I

(Answers tomorrow)

DONKEY

ISLAND

A " SHOE·IN "
Jumble Book No. 15; containing 110 puzzles, Is auilable tor $1.7~ po1tpakt
lrom Jumble, cJo thlt newspaper, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 0764B. Include your
name, address, zip coda end make checks payable lo N•w&amp;pape~s.

BRIDGE
Careful play scores game
By Oswald Jacobv
and Alan Sontag ·

NO RTH

In modern bidding South's
jump to three spades is only
what the late Ely Culbertson
used to ca II a 99.14 perc-ent
force.

North has only 13 htgh-card
points. but he has no qualms
about gomg

10

four s pJdes

po1nts look

Th ose

mt ghty

• K 6 54
t K7
+ AI086 4

WEST
. ....
.QJ 10

t A964

tn

stops to count wtnner s He

mv and if he ca n do thai he
can afford to lose a spade
tn ek later
Now if SoUth is an oplmlJSt
h ~ will try to make an over ·

+ KJ

. 32

West ope ns ttl~! quee n uf

m1d · rm
South pl ay~ low fr om dumm \'
and the suit IS conti nued

. A987
t Q 10

SOoTH
+ AQI 0976

hearts and three of Norlh ·s
va m sh

EAST
+J 5 432

t JB532
+ Q9 532

good.
poin ts

4-8-81

+K 8

+ J

Vulnerable: East· West
Dealer: North
West

North

East

Soutb

t+

Pass
Pass
Pass

1+
3+

Pass

I NT

Pass
Pass

4+

Pass

Opening lead:• Q

tnck. He &gt;$ill play king. ace
and a third di amond in order

to ruff w1th dummy's eight of
spades. East will overruff
with the jack and lead back a
· spade. Our opti mist will have
no way to ruff h1s last dt a. mond and will be one tn the
soup.

pessi mi st

to mak e

the-

contract. He JUSt must pla.'

of clubs and kmg-ace of
dta monds

Then he ruffs

a di a·

mond w1th dummy 's king of
s pe~des

and a club with his &lt;ice

of spades Then hts last diamond IS ruffed bv dummv·s
etght Thr Jack 'nf !rumps.

t ~ken then or later . ts the
1h1rd and last tm:k for the

defense

by THOMAS .tqSEPH
ACROSS
40 Beginning
I Varnish
41 "Nonna - "
ingredient
(1979 film )
t Bootlace
DOWN
9 GrandI Memory
parental
lacuna
11 Writer,
2 Use
Ignazio 3 Burlesque
12 Glass
theater
13 "In Cold Blood" vendors
Yesterday's Answer
author
I Climbing
10 C.S.A.
25 Rita
14 Band member
vine
legend
or Antonio
16 Undressed
5 Lofty spot 11 Surmount 26 Baptized
hide
6 "Sesame
15 Numerous 28 Walk
17 District
Street"
21 Skill
30 Old Greek
of England
favorite
22 Average
colony
18 Accor&lt;' ,,g to
7 Give a
23 Relief
31 Finnish lake
19 Ending
right to
pitchers 34 Matter
for Israel
8 Reservation 21 Greek
(law )
20 Curse
sight
township 36 Sandpiper
2% Soccer great r.1-r.-"'T':'23 Rage
21 Judith
Andei'Son
title
25 Hand (sl. )
21 Pianist,
Peter 27 Killer whale
Z8 Take it
on the 29 Never (Ger
3% Alkali
33 Ralph

m

paroled ax·convict can't 111m to

~program-

•

Waldo 35 Appear
OUTER LIMITS
37 Sicilian
10:58
C!INJ,IPDATE NEWli
hot spot
" :oo • Cll ma Cll em (IJ) •
NEWS
·38 Sea nymph
()) JEWISH VOICE
CD RACE FOR THE PENNANT 39 Biblical
PR!VIEWHBOSpono1akonlook '
mountain
back at t980baaeball ,provid.. an
analyala of the winter tradea,.and
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It :
not11howth1 t8811eaaoniaahap·
AXYDLIIAAX!t
!nil up.
II LONGFELLOW
11J IIOAECAMBEANDWISE
11:15 ~NIGHT GALLERY
·
11:2B
C,BH UPDATE NEWS
11:30
II C!l THE TONIGHT SHOW
---- Gutal: Angla Dlckinoon. (60
mlna.l
()) RQIIBAGLEYSHOW
CIJ (IJ) •
ABC NEWS
NJGiflUN!
II CIJ
NBA BASKETBALL
PLAYOF~ GAME Toomaand aile to

J

r j [X I J'

countrymen Ja cquea Breland Edith
Pial.

BARNEY

SOUP IS COLD!!

~L--J.~
........~......~·\...-

Now arrange the circled leners to
form the surprise answer, as suggested by the abo\le cartoon

ffi

~1.42.

Leadingham of Leadincham Realty 1
ns approved Cleland IIMied
members of the upcoming continuing education couraes wblch are
available and the .board endoned
HOUle Bill 113 which would make
more mortgage monty' at leaaer
rates available.

WA'S CALLED.

What the cobbler who ran lor offi ce was -

safe.
He.starts by cashtng the ace

ooed·Caplioned; U.S.A.)
700CLUB
MOVIE ·(ROMANCE) "
"Still" 1880
CIJ (iJ) II ABC NOVEL FOR
TELEVISION: MASADA Sil•e end

KNITT'ING C.IRC.Lc

CHESS

special one nour episode in whic h
Arnold , Drummond . and Willis are
taken hostage by bank robbe r s.

t ional TV apecial.taped before an

•

Answer

PUPIL

· South doesn't need to be a

audience at Chicago's Park West
Theeler Club. (60 mine.)
(fi) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
'Gonllas' Th is spec1al takes a look
at the conservation i sts wh o are

Sentinel Ads

I Jumbles

WHAi iHE COMEDIAN
AI iHEMEN'S

"[I I

mine.)
8:30 ()) JOHN WESLEY WHITE
8:58 ()) CBN UPDATE NEWS
8:00 ill&amp; C!J DIFF 'RENTSTROKESA

Plan Easter program

Realtors welcome member
Margaret Bryant of Century 21
Southern HtUs Re,al Estate was
welcomed ail a new member when
the Southea.stem Ohio Board of
Realtors met recently at the
Colonial IM, Jackaon.
Hank Cleland, Pomeroy, presided
over the meeting l[ith 25 memberil
attending. Cleland announced a convention will be held In Toronto and
the public relat!Dill conunlttee
reported that logo for billboard advertlllng for private property week
wu approved and that new&amp;paj)el'
advertil1ng will also appear at that
time.
.
An audit report, given by Willis

NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC

liD ALLCREATURESGREAT AND
MOO iS, UH, ONE OF
THOSE ' PRIM111VE
COUNTRIES NI)W
EMERGING IN THE
THIRD I'.ORLD, WllH A
CULTURE DATING BACK
TO THE STONE AGE'

Dl [) 'IOU SI&gt;.Y

Yes terdays

THE

sees th:t t the wmmng play ~ ~
to ruff t wo diamonds in dum·

'Gorlllu' This special takes a look
at the c onservationists who ere
workingt oaasurethatthelaroeat ot .
the great apes, the gorilla . will not
tall victim to extinction . (60 mina.)

• Molds • Chocolate
• Easter Baskets

r-----------1~~~~~~~~~~~

Answer here

II

I!;ANHERO
O CD® ENOS Enos plunges the

Cil

DID 1 HEAR 'tOIJ
RIGHT. SENATOR'i'

ISEWNARl

South ruffs th e lhlfd heart and

(!Omina.)

317 N. 2nd Ave.
Middlep,ort, Oh.
992 •6342

l K!1 I I

Wat1rfront" 1054

(I)IH!III THE GREATEST AMER-

EASTER CANDY
.SUPPUES

An Easter program will be held at
the Senior' Citizens Genter, Palm
Sunday, Apri112, at 3 p.m. featuring
the Senior Citizens chorus and the
kitchen band.
Following the program the public
is invited to join the members for a
poUuck supper. Everyone is asked to
traffic accident Tuesday on West . bring a covered dish and their own
Virginia 2near Lesilge.
table service. Meat and beverage
Mary Fulton, 65, Cheshire, a for- will be provided by thew senior
mer librarian at Kyger Creek High citizens. Everyone is invited to atSchool, is a patient in the hospital's tend.
surgical inten!live care unit after ~~-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
suffering head injuries in a car- ~
truck collision.

Her husband, Huber, formerly
asaociated with Fulton-Thompson
Tractor Sales' in Meigs County, is
Usted in satisfactory condition in the
hospital's orthopedic section with. a
fractured left hip. He was scheduled
to undergo surgery today.
According to !he Cabell CoWJty
sheriff's depilrtment, the accident
occurred at 12:.0 p.m. when the
Fulton station wagon and a truck
driven by Ronald E. Casto, fl, ci
Waverly. Casto received a nose
laceration and injury to his riglt
ann while a passenger in his truck,
Lewis Ward, 411, Piketon, sustained
head and facial cuts.

W

AVE'H6ER"!~ AH'

Fonner KC teacher critical

Chamber

(9osed-Caplioned: U.S.A.)
SIGHTS AND SOUNDS OF
LIFE
ill LIDO DE PARIS STARRING
SHIRLEY MACLAINE Shkley Ma -

IT'S TH' "~RAY

entire Metro Squad in ' hot water '
when he insists on arresti ng the
wife of the Deputy Chief ol Police.

CAROUSEL CONFECTIONERY

TULFIEl

em

Area deaths .]
Cliff d R H
or
• ayes

~ IHIIII

FAMILYFEUD
WILD KINGDOM 'LaS! Home ol
tho Elophanl'
II C1J TIC TAC DOUGH
CIJ @
MACNEIL-LEHRER
REPORT
NEWS
7:30 ill G BULLSEYE
ATHOME WITH THE BIBLE
SANFORD AND SON
; O CIJ JOKER'S WILD
HDU YWOOD SQUARES
CIJ(fi) DICKCAVETTSHDW
RICHARD SIMMONS SHOW
II FACE THE MUSIC
7:58
Q.BN.UPDATE NEWS
8:00
B C!l REALPEOPLEJohnBar·
bour at a reun i on of POW's from
'

'

Cheesebrew of Shawnee; three
others sisters, Mary L. Balnwn,
Lilah Rownellote and Beiilab V.
Piatt, all of Columbus. Several
nieces, nephews and cousina al!o
survive.
.
Services will be held at 4 p.m.
Thursday at the llawllnpoCoallo
Blower Funeral Home In Middleport
with the Rev. Frank Cheesebmf
and the Rev. Mark McClung ctfictating. Burial will be in Chester
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral hcmle at anytime today.
Membel'll of Drew Webster POIIt 39,
American Legion, will . conduct
graveside rites.
.------------

rname
m®®m NEws
()) BIBLE BOWL
(I)

PROP05AL"r

reports, transport prisoners, but do
it 24 hours a day, seven days a week,
three hundred sixty-five days a
year. Mr. Frank has eight employes
that work .0 hours a week. That is
five days a week with evenings and
nights off along with weekends.
"Mr. Frank's budget for salaries
shows a $50,000 plus figure. This
seems Uke a reasonable figure .
What is not shown is that several of
Mr. Frank's employes draw special
checks each month from other
budgets, such as assessing real
property and real estate
assessment.Oneemploye,forexampie, shows a modest $8,300 salary
from the auditor's office, but when
you look further you lind this same
employe draws a S500 plua a month
check in addition, making his tolal
salary for a year in excess of f15,000.
The $500 plus a month comes from a
real 'estate assessment budget.
There are other employes who show
a $7,000 plus salary, and here, again,
a f'DO plus from another fund to
place their real S!llaries to the $9,000
plus salaries.
"Therewasoneemployewhogota
check every two weeks just Uke
everyone else, but with one exception, this emplaye never came to
work. This emplaye stayed home
and got paid. No sick pay, just
regular pay and no-show at the office.
"There was one pel'l!on who was
under limited contact with the count
for his services. When his contract
ran out he was put on a different

•

One leiter oimply otands lor another. In this sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X lor lhe two O's, etc. Single letters,
aposlrophes, the length and formation ol the worda are oil
hints. Each day the code letters are di/Yerent.
CIIYPTOQUOTES
BFWPI
UWBZZPK

FWQFBWQC
IPDYU

BRV

YQW
UYQ

DWQQR
GJWIV

UYPRTC OJ . - KYWPCUJFYQW OJWIQN
Yf!.ltmlly'• Cryp!Gquote: HE IS NOT ONLY DULL HIMSELF,_
BUT 11IE CAUSE OF DULLNFS') IN OTHERS.-JOHNSON

Prison candidate
.The only man to run for U. S. president from prison
1111 Eqene Debs, who was Serving a sentence fir
aeditiOD during World War I. He was nominated by the
Soclall.lt Party and received nearly I mJllion votes, 1r
3.5 percent cl the total vote.

�Page-14

The Da11y Sent1ne1

Wednesday.

, Pomeroy-Middleport, Oh1o

Aprile, 1981

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
Publtc Nohce

Public Nottce

LAFF- A- DAY

Pubhc Nollce

Public Notice

'

Public Notice

Public Notice

Situated m FractiOn 25 and
FractiOn 7 of Bedford
Tawnsh p Me1gs County
OhiO
Tra ct 3
one half
ac r es
more or less
Situated 1n Lebanon Town
sh p M etgs County OhiO
desc r bed 1n Volume 238
Page 815 Metgs County
Deed Records
Tract 4
Bemg 91 76
acres more or less n Sui
ton Townsh p Me1gs Coun
Oh1o
described
n
tv
Volume 243 Page 1029
Me gs county Deed Recor
ds
Tract 5 Lots 3 4 5 6 6
and 9 s t uated n Mayers
Addtl on to lhe v It age of
Rac1ne
Me gs County
Oh o descr bed
n the
tollowmg deeds Volume
247 Page 721 Volume 247
Page 743
Volume 257
Page 901
Volume 247
Page 729 Me gs County
Deed Records
The r ght 1S reserved to
r e1ect any or all b ds
Bernard V Fultz
Executor of the
Estate of
Roger Adams
deceased
P 0 Box 723
Pomeroy Oh o
45769

IS 255 00
&gt;erVIces
2 582 00 Total
Serv ces PUPil Program
Year 1"1
Sub
Total
All
FINANCIAL
Puptls
77711
77
DPPF
14 467 68
11 000
4 913 21 Pr nctpal
Eq uipment
REPORT OF TilE
Educat1onal Med1a
IN LOVING memory of our
Federal Funds
1nterest
3 622 50
Total
BOARD
OF
Serv ces
255 06
Mother Glenna S M lhoan
ESEA Ttlle I
Tota l
14 622 50
Regular
EDUCATION
Total Support
(DtSadvantaoed
who passed away one year
105 15
Year 1"2
1nstruct1on
Eastern Loca I
Services
Youth
I
30
3421M
ago Apnl8 1980
11 000
Pnnc1pal
Spectal
School Dtstnct
Instructional
ESEA Ttlle
2 9'10 00
Its 1ust one year ago
2 331 21 1nterest
I nstrucflon
Metgs Counly
Staff
255 06
IV
B
2
460
00
13 990 00
262 76 Total
Vocation al
today
38900 SR 7
Executtve Adm
Ttlle VI B
20 2S4 00
Yearm3
Reedsvtlle Ohto
That our dear mother
Serv ces
125 79 Supp Serv - Pupils
Total All Spec al
Pr nctpal
thru F1scal
45772
Total Support
passed away
Rece.pts
115 789 31
Interest
SerVIces
3
775
62
March
25
1981
Serv1cesGen
EX PENOtTURES
And some of course thought
13 357 50
Total
Eloise Boston
Adm n
125 79 O~rat on and Mamt
BY FUNCTION
wed forget
Year 1"4
of Plant
Treasurer of the
Off tee ollhe
OBJECT CATEGORY
But no we haven t no not
11 000
Serv1ces
929 00 Pnnqpal
Board ol
Prmc pal
AND TYPE OF
yet
1nterest
1 725 00
Education
Serv1ces
4488 Sub T1&gt;tal All
FUND
12 725 00
7 403 74 Tota
Equ pment
We tr ed m our poor feeble
614 9854292
Total Support
$Persona I Servtces
Year m5
Regular
way
CASH
Servtces- School
Public NotiCe
Sa lanes and
11 000
71900 Princ1pal
1nstruct1on
RECONCILIATION
Adm n
44 88
To make I fe pleasant day
Benefits
1 0'12 50
Interest
56600
Vocat1onal
Total Fund
""
F1sca1
serv1ces
797
59
by day
General
Fund
Property Tax
12 092 50
Total
Supp Serv - Puptls
Balances Dec 31
Operat on and
(Gross)
6 885 46 Instruction
Were all such faulty
Year 1996
fhru F seal
1980
$200 120 63 Trans Fees from Other Total Regular In
Ma
nt
of
Plant
creatures though
8 000
serv1ces
7 741 47 Prmc1pal
Gross Depos1tory
Serv1ces
I 613 90
struct10n
588 229 95
Dtst (Outs de State)
We taoled n lots of th ngs
46000
Interest
Ope rat on and
1Bank&gt; Balances
Transportation
To tal Spec1alln
Tran
sportat1on
8 460 00
we know
Total
Ma1nt of P ant
Bank 1
142 338 08
Serv1ces
structton
IIJ 528 49
Fees from Other
Servtces
664 90 Total
Sub Tota l Depos tory
It seems tf we cou ld have
I Pup Is)
24 533 54
Sources
3 024 39 To tal Vocat on al l n
Pr nc pal
173 000
Tra ns Svcs I Pup Is)
Bank
Tota l Support
her now
sttuclton
85 726 18
Earnmgson Invest
Total Interest
83 260 00
through Other
Balances
142 338 08
Servlces We miQht do more tor her
ments
6 012 10 Support1ng serv1ces
Total
256 260 00
Supporl
Investments
Busmess
35 062 53
Extracurncular (Student) Gu dance
somehow
COMBINED
svcs
400
00
Cert f cates of
Total
All
Serv
ces
21
402
90
Act1v1t1es
But we are sure she 1S at
STATEMENT OF
Depos t
70 ooo 00 Class Fees
Exp
36 737 44 Sub Tot at All
1 719 99 Health
rest
ASSETS AND
Repla
cemen
t
Sub Tota l Invest
State
and
Serv ces
10 859 77
M1sc Rece pts fro m Loca l
LIABILITIES
Her fa1th was tned she
EqUIP
10 113 37
ments
70 000 00 Sources
Federal Funds
Total Support
ASSETS
Replacement School
stood the test
Total
212 338 06 Rentals
nstruct1on
Serv ces 677 18
Buses
24 133 54 Current
Outstand ng Warrants
Total Spec all n
Those of you blessed wtth a
RuptiS
32 262 67
Refund of Pnor
Depository (bank)
OTHER EXP
lcheckst Dec 31
struciiOn
2 331 21
mother
Years Exp
1 152 16 Improvemen t of
ba lances
128 223 13
BY OBJECT AND
1980
14
114
95
Support
ng
ServiCeS
nstruct
on
Sa
le
and
Loss
of
Be k nd to her you II never
1nvestments
70 000 00
TYPE OF FUND
Total f Reconctled
lnstrud
an
Enhance
Serv1ces
10
465
17
Assets
10 783 59
have another
Accounts rece1v
Local
Funds
198 223 13 Other
Balance)
ments
2
582
00
Educat
a
nal
Med
a
Rece pts f rom
Sadly miSsed by Son Ber
ab le
31 596 59
General Fund
Ad ustments
Total Support
Serv ces
19 254 06
Loca l Sources
52 95
Inventory
10 920 00
nard M lhoan Mr &amp; Mrs
Dues
and
Fees
Bank
1 897 50 Rece1pts from State Sour
Serv
ces
Total Support
(4) 6 7 8 9 4tc
Total Current
Erroe--Charged
W II am Rose B. Famtly
Puplls
2 582 00 County Board of
Serv ces- 1nstruct1on
ces
240 734 72
Assets
EducatiOn Contn
Regular Acco unt for
Total All
M r &amp; Mrs Blame M lhoan
al Stall
29 719 23
Unrestncted Grants
bUIIOn
16 279 90 F 1xed
Road and Coupon
E xp
4 913 21
&amp; Fam ly
Mr &amp; Mrs
Board of Educat on
n
A d
1 175950 23
19 000 00
Land
All Other Dues
Charges Corrected
Other
Serv ces
2 410 95
Rece pts trom Federal
W II am
M I hoa n &amp;
1 250 000 00
Bu ldmgs
and FeesJan 1981
Expend1fures
Execut
ve
Adm
Sources
Daughter
250 000 00
Obi
11 11853 EQUIPment
Adtusted Total
200 120 63 Restr.cted Grants
General Fund
Publ c Noftce
Se rv ces
37 606 31
Total F1xed
l11surance
3
023
20
SUMMARY OF
Board
of
Educatton
Tota
l
Support
Servlces'" A d (Through
1 519 000 00
Assets
CASH BALANCES
Serv ces
595 00 Taxes and Assess
J
Announceme~ts
Gen Admtn
40 017 26
I 438 00
Sta te)
Total
ments
545
PUB LIC NOTICE
RECEIPTS AND
Executtve
Adm
Transfers
437 oa Off ce of t he
Assets
1 759 739 72
EXPENDITURES
Serv ces
In accordance With Sec
277 00 Other M sc
I PAY ht ghest pr ces
Pr nc1pal
Tota l All
Exp
ton
117
06
of
the
Oh
o
Opentng
Cash
Other Support
300 00 L IABILITIE S
possible for gold and s tver
Servtces
51 613 01
Recetpls
I 500 469 13
Totaf
32 727 08 Short Term
Serv1ces - Gen
Rev sed Code ame nded by
Balance
Bond Retirement
cons rmgs tewetry etc House
F seal ~ervtce
23 614 96
Accr-ued wages
Olher Local
Adm n
B I No 440 the
Jan 1 1980
20
666
03
Fund
Operat1on
and
Ma
nt
Contac t Ed Burkett Barber follow ng s the F manc al Local Funds
payable
96 889 44
Tolal Support
' Funds
pts
from
Local
Sour
of
Plant
Rece
Shop Mtddleport
Serv ces- Gen
Ser al Bonds
Report of he Board of General (unrestncted
1100000 Accrued rettrement
ces
Serv1ces
65 037 54
payable
12 902 41
montes&gt;
127 765 OJ Taxes
Adm n
L brary Trus tees of the
21 538 03 Interest
Transportat on
Accrued 1nterest
Senal
Bonds
10
580
00
Bond
Ret
re
Off
tee
of
the
M
e
gs
L
oca
l
Schoo
l
D
str
ct
General
Property
RACINE GUN SHOOT
Serv1ces
828 96
payable
Dues and Fees
Publ c L brary for Ja nuary
1142329
Pnnc pal
ment
Real Estate
(Pupils)
112 099 07
Rae ne Gun Club every
Trade
accounts
County
Board
of
Services
I 1960 through Augus t 16
Food Servtces
I 053 63
153
00
(Gross) ,
29 629 95 Total Support
Fnday n g ht start ng at 1980
payable
51 804 72
Ed ucat1on Contn
Total Support
Umform School
Tang ble Personal
Servlces 7 3Q p m Faclory choke
but on
7J8 12 Other short term
SerVIces School
SCHEOU LEA I
Supplies
708 80
Property Tax
6ustness
200
750
87
11ab1llt1es
20 118 54
guns only
22 31 8 12
Adm n
CASH
State Funds
153 00 Total
(Gross)
316 02 E~tracurr~cular Ac
Total Shorl Term
Total
Disadvantaged
RECONCILIATION
F seal serv1ces
8 680 40
Rece pts tram State Sour
ltv
t
es
18
930
46
Ltabtliltes
182 544 07
To al Fund
Senal Bonds
Operat on and
Pup1l Program
1100000
ces
Total All
YOUR
PIANO
Too
Long Ter m
Interest
Balan ces August 26
IDPPF)
365025 Unres tr cted Grants
Ma
nt
of
Plant
Exp
2 107 990 12
valuab le to neglect expert
1058000 Bond mdebted
1980
$4 607 43 Educattonal Tele
Serv1ces
5 45 Ser al Bonds
nAtd
197S67
Other Local
ness
162 000 oo
Dues
and
Fees
Transport
at
on
tun ng &amp; and repa r Lane Depos tory
VISIOn
47 00 Total Al l
Funds
Total Long Term Lta
Counly Board of
Balances
9 886 37 Federal Funds
Serv1ces
Oan els 742 295 1 or 992
Rece tpts
31 921 64 Food Serv 1ces
43 669 69
btl tes
34454407
Education Contr
Tota l Oepos tor y
(Pup Is)
Title I
4 Q6665
2 050 00
2082
Other
Tot al Su ppor t
but on
19 01 8 02 Reserve for Encum
Ba lances
9 886 37 Ttlle IV B
Tota Support
1 919 00
Local
Funds
Servl
ces
brances
5 040 78
All Other Dues
Investments
Serv1ces T tie IV C
2 470 47 Trans Fees from Other
Busm ess
4J 669 69
Comb tned Net
Cert t cates of
and Fees
Rae ne Vol unteer F re
Ttlal VI B
Busmess
10 736 05
650 00 D•st (O uts•de Stale)
Tota l All
1 410 154 87
Equ ty
Depostl
3 400 15 Total - All
Obt
II 118 53
Extracurncular Ac
Department sponsors a
Transportal on
Exp
43 669 69
0 00
t1v t es
3 023 20
Funds
153 753 52
300 00 Insurance
shot gun &amp; nfle match Cash on Hand
Fees Fro m Other
State and
14) B He
To tal
13 266 52
Total Rece1pts
Transfers
29 517 35 Ta xes and Assess
every Sat n ghl 6 30 p m
Sources
236 04
Federal Funds
ments
Outstand ng Checks
Total
Al
l
and
Transfers
5
45
Food Se rv ces
Total Spec 1alln
at the r build ng m Bashan
Ll)st and Found
6
August 26
Exp
Loca l Funds
62 244 43 Other MISe
Food Serv ces struc t on
28 768 07
Factory choke 12 guage
1980
867909 General tu nresrncted
Exp
300
00
Other
Stud ents
53 512 66 EducatiOnal M ed1a
shot guns on v Open s ghts Tota - Clerk Treasu r er s
Total
55 04520 2 black &amp; tan beagle pups 1
local Fund•
mones
1 50046913 Classroom Matenals and
Serv1ces
8 246 67
male 1 female Lost In E
22 r fie
Bal ance Avgus t 26
Ftscat
Servtces
T
738
12
RECONCILIATION
Bond Rettre
Fees
Total Support
Letart area If found call
1980
• 607 43
OF
INTER
FUND
Tolal
Support
men!
31 921 64 C assroom
Ser v1ces 247 3125
SCHEDULE A II
Serv cesTRANSFERS
Food Serv ces
127 374 25
Instruc t anal
Supplies
2 006 27
MEIGS MUSEUM open bY
SUMMARY OF
BY FUND
Busmess
Un1form School
736
12
Workbooks
4
005
51
staff
6 246 67
appo ntment January Mar
CASH BALANCES
Transfers In
Debt Serv ces
Su ppl es
21 580 00
10 013 78 Refund of Pr or Years
Execut ve Adm
ch 992 2264 992 2802 991
Gen Fund
RECEIPTS AND
Total All
State Funds
437 00 Lost "!lear Portland two
Ex
p
21
so
Serv1ces
2997
50
Lunch
Room
EXPENDITURES
25
337
46 female fox hounds one
D sadvantaged
E
xp
22
318
12
2360 or 992 2639 H tslor es
Rece pts f om State Sour
Total Support
FUND
Umform
while and one brown and
Pup I Program
Slate
and
Federa
I
for
sale
Pomeroy
ces
Serv1ces - Gen
Genera l
Supplies
Funds
(OPPF)
14 467 66 Unrestnc ed Grants
4 000 00 white 8rl3 2354
Middleport L•brar es
Ad
mm
2
997
50
~:. :.nrp l;:~n 1
Tran sfer s
Federal Funds
179 89
437 00 T180
•n Atd
3 120 13 F sea l Serv ces
366 75
Total
1980
5 427 85 T tie I
Refund of
29 954 35
JO 521 93 Rece pts from Federa l Tota l Support
LOST tn Portland small
Transfers Out
TtleiVB
Pr or Year s
IT SBEELINE SShowand Total
2 460 00 Sources
Serv1ces Recetpts
37 649 19 T tie VI B
Gen
Fund
29
517
35
tan
&amp; while long ha tred dog
Rece
pts
20 254 00 Unrestncted Grants
1
632
52
Tell T me • ' Our new
Bus ness
366 75
TTBB78
437
00
All
Total - All
Tolal
part
Pekingese Answers to
spr ng and summer line s Tota l 0 sburse
m A1d (Through
Tota l All
29 954 35 Bear 843 2815
Ex p
meniS
39 502 05
Funds
I 737 482 41
2 068 52 Total
State)
45
U486
Exp
4038099
now ava I able and •s t un
Net Tran sf ers
Status
Total Rece1pts
Total
Transfers
29 337 46
Purchased Serv ces
bel e"Yable '''' G ve us a
In lOut )
1 008 70
Gen Fund
(29 080 35 )
Transfers and
(Expenditures
Total
All
Supplies
and
ca ll for more •nformat on Bal ance Aug 26
Lunch Room
25 337 46 L.OST White business en
by Funct1on
Balances
Recetpts
137
386
03
Ma1ertals
about thiS •nterest.ng work
Un1torm
1980
2 566 29 Local Funds
Instruc t on
velope marked I mport~t
Sf
ate
and
Federal
General
Fund
Federal Pro1ect
Supplies
4 000 00 papers on front This fs
General (u nrestr cted
Phone 9'12 3941 from 9 6
Total Regular In
Funds
Total
Reg
ul
ar
Balance Jan I
179 89 valuable to the party whO
mon es)
I 628 234 16 Rece pts from State Sou r
struclton
621 136 26 TlBO
Instruct an
26 237 26
1980
0 00 Bond
TT8B78
(437 00)
Total Spec at tn
ces
Tolal
Speoal
lost them Lost somewhere
LOCKSM ITH
Se rv1ce
Total
SCHEDULE OF
Ret rement
structton
94 B90 B4
43 344 93 Restr cted Gr ants
Instruct on
1 660 33 Total
between Jones Boys store
Master Key,ng
Cbm
RecetpiS
1 797 00 Food Serv1ces
INDEBTEDNESS
Vocaltonalln
128 427 28
m Atd
14 467 68 To tal Vocat onal
Total D sburse
and
Elberfelds
In
BONOS
un form School
bmat10ns Bonded Call
strucllon
90 980 01
Rece pts from Fe dera l
nstruct on
2 607 40
ment s
764 56
Pomero;y
Reward
992
Supplies
Descr1pfton
or
Purpose
of
Support1ng
Serv
ces
10 722 58 Sources
New Haven W Va 304 882
S'Upport ng Se rv1 ces
Ne t Transfers
Issue
Gu dance
State Funds
2368
2079
Restr1cted Grants
Gu dance
lniDul)
• 100870 Disadvantaged
Serv ces
22 208 91 Jumor H1gh Bu1ld1ng
tn
Atd
(Through
Serv
ces
626
16
Balance Aug 26
H'4
Interest Rate
Pupil Program
Health
Sta te)
53 050 04 Hea lth
Yard Sale
1980
2041 14
RACINE Gun Club has
I DPPF )
1811793 Transfers
Serv1ces
Interest
Dale
6-12
1 7
11
268
85
179
89
Serv
ces
329 16 Psychologtcal
Total
Educat onal Tele
Issue Date
7 1 73
d•scont nued gun shoots un
Total
All
Psycholog1ca
I
Ba lance Jan 1
VISIOn
12 1 96
SerVIces
47 00
860 08 Malurtty Date
t 1September
Recetpls
67 703 61
Serv ces
430 08 Speec
Yard Sale April ~ 11 from
1980
5 417 85 Federal Funds
Amount Outstandmg
h Pathology
Tolal
Total Support
Total
T1tle I
of
Begmnmg
and
Audtology
9
30 to 6 oo •t the corner of
34 588 58 Rece1pts from Loca l Sour
Serv ces Rece pts
J9 446 19 Ttlle IV B
The Havman Family
Penoa
184 000 00 4th and Brldgem•n Streets
Se rVIces
7 455 00
4 379 00 ces
Pup
Is
1
385
40
Prmctpal Redempt1ons
Tttle IV C
I nstruch on Enhance
2 470 47 Taxes
S ngers that you hear on Total 0 sbu r se
n Syracuse
Improvement of
menfs
40 266 62 T tie VI 8
our1ng
20 904 00 General Propertyments
2 582 00
Sunday morn ngs at 9 30 Net
I
nstruct1on
Tr ansfer s
Total -A ll
Penod
11 000 00
Real Estate
Serv1ces
am on W M P 0 rad o
215 04 Tot~ I Support
lin) fOul)
0 00
Services Amount Outstand1ng
Garage Sale April 9 ID-11
Funds
I 891 235 9Jr
!G
rossi
32
1
966
01
Med
a
Educat1onal
w II be preach ng and Balance Aug 26
End ot
Total Expenditures
PUPilS
44 371 84
on
Rt 681 at Alfred Watch
Tang
bl
e
Persona
l
1
421
29
Servt&lt;.'es
prov dmg the s ng ng at the
1980
4 607 43
Im provement of
and Transfers
Penod
173 000 00 for signs New handm•de
Property Tax
Total Support
Nease Sett lement Church
I cer t fy !he above r eport Local Funds
Instruct on
MEMORANDUM
(Gross )
7 201 48
Seni iCes qu il ts afghans and other
to be correct
serv ce begmnlng w1th Sun
General (unrestncted
10 680 21
Serv1ces
DATA
Trans
Fees
from
Other
lnstru
ct
lonal
beautiful •ssorted gifts
S gned)
montes)
1 488 346 78 D st l Ouis de Sta te)
Educational
Med
a
day School Apnl 12 at 10
DATA
USED
FOR
Staff
1 636 33
Very large qu•ntty of
Ellen Bell
Bond Ret re
Servtces
36 267 16
CURRENT YEAR
a m Other serv1ces are
Transportal on
Board of Education
C Jerk Treasur er
books
records
and
ment
Total Support
22
318
12
COLLECTIONS
Fees
from
Other
Su nday even ng at 7 30
Serv1ces
163
00
of the Board Food Servtees
11629374
Serv ces magazines
Lots
of
Tax
valuations
assessed
So
urces
J
260
43
Adm
Exec
uf1ve
p m Thursday even mg at
Un form School
lnsfruct
iOnal
l
tn
whole
dollars&gt;
clothing
plus
much
more
~
PUBLIC
NOTICE
Earnmgs
on
Inves
t
Se
rv1c
es
2 173 55
7 30 p m Come w orsh p
Suppt es
7 658 57
stall
46 947 37 Real Property In accordance w th Sec
m ents
6 012 10 Other Support
w th
us
Everyone
Board of Educatton
Commercial
310 500
lion 117 06 of th e Oh o State Funds
Food Serv cc s
serY1ces
Gen
welcome
Servtces
3 186 95
Residential
5 675 360 4 family yard sate April 10
Rev sed Code amended by Disadvantaged
Food
Serv
ces
Adm
n
1140
28
Pup 1Program
Execut ve Adm
11 9 ~ 40 Rustle Hill
House 8 II No 440 the
Agri cultural
5 302 840
Students
53 512 66 Total Support
ID PPF )
13 865 41 Classroom Mater als and
Serv ces
fol low ng s the Fmanc al
43 180 15
Publtc
Syracuse Clothes kitchen
Serv1ces
Gen
Stweart Johnson
VFW
Report of the Board of Federal Funds
Ultltltes
30 600 ttems baby Items outdoor
Fees
Adm n
3 496 83 Other Support
Post '1'126
Mason
w II
Serv1ces - Gen
Ltbrary Trustees of the T lie I
29 510 16 Classroom
Mtneral
51 BOO furniture
Off
ce
ot
the
dishwasher
nom nate off1cers on Apnl
Adm1n
2 124 14
Me gs
County
Public T tie IV B
2180631 Personal PropertySuppl es
2 008 27
Pnnc pill
cabinets
m
ise
Ra in can
TlleiVC
Total Support
2 470 47 Workbooks
1A &amp; Will elect off1cers on
Ltbrary for August 26 1980
General
2 87~ 43 eels
4 005 51
Serv 1ces
4 649 90
T tie VI B
8 527 91 Class Fees
Serv1c~s
Gen
through December 31 1980
Public
Apr I 28 All members are
1
719
99
Tol al Suppo rt
Tota l - All
66 175 41
Ut ltly
Admtn
SCHEDULE A I
5 194 410
urged to attend at7 p m
M1sc Rece pts from Local
Serv 1ces - School
Funds
1 691 115 30 Sources
Off tee of the
Total
CASH
MOVING SALE
Wood
Admtn
4
649
90
Endtng Cash
Prmc1pal
RECONCILIATION
Assessed
16 853 143 burning stove
Rentals
677 18 F seal
piano,
Balance
Serv
ces
56
670
79
Total Fund Balances
Current
expense
m
illage
Serv1ces
Refund of Pnor Years
3 662 05
stereo tires chain saw
Dec 31 1981
Total Support
December 31
1nStde 10 m II
Exp
I 174 68 Operat on and
clothes &amp;. mise Items Frl
Loca
l
Fijnds
1960
Serv ces- School
11m1tation
$541507
Sale and Loss of
Ma~nt of Plant
Gene ral fu nrestr cted
Oepos tory
Admm
56 670 79
PubliShed B
4 9 5 S•t 9 3 Gary Nelson,
Servtces
U7 437 85
Assefs
10 783 59
m on es)
139 887 BB
FIScal Serv ces
37 872 12
Balances
Effective D
673 92
4 Flatwoods Rd 2 miles from
Transportal
on
Bond
Operatton and
Tot a Depos tory
Outstde 10m II
Ftve Points
Serv1ce
Other Rece tpts from Local
Retirement
Matnl of Plant
Balances
21 026 81
llmltat on
673 92
(Pup Is)
Source
52
95
70
869
58
Food Serv1ces
12 133 54 Rece pfs tram State Sour Total Support
Servtces
214 332 SB
1nvestments
School d1Str1ct
Un1form School
Transportal on
Cer t t cates ot
Published A
16 PORCH SALE Turn first
Services ces
Supplies
Serv ces
Depos1t
3 064 01 Unrestn cted Grants
Effective C
l 369 35
16 road left from Mladteport
BuSiness
221
909
48
State Funds
Totallnvesf
(PUPilS)
209 492 39 Total school dtst
Hill past WMP(J, S•t
m Atd
1 186 046 63 Non programmed
D
sadva
ntaged
ments
116 055 90
outs1de m1llage
5 389 35
Charges
17 791 86 Food Servtces
Restncted Grants
April
11 9 4 2 Inch pipe
Regtster
for
Pupil
Program
Total Support
Cash on Ha nd
Publ ished B
14 00
tn Atd
14 467 68 Total All
~ drums flower stand pipe
(D
PPF
)
4
252
52
ServicesTotal
Cash
on
Effective
C
Pnzes'
Rece pts from Fe dera l
Exp
281 374 79
fittings baby clothes &amp;.
BuSiness
577 753 59 Bonded debt mtllage
Hand
14 00 Educat onal Tete
Sour ces
Other Local
v son
mise Pnced to sell Rain
ExtracurriCUlar
F1rst Pme
The
47 00 unrestncted Grants
School
d
lstnct
Total
6 077 27
Funds
Federal Funds
or shine
AchVIIIes
19 230 -46
Published A
Outstandtng Checks
I
nstruct1on
m
A1d
(Through
new Ford Escort
Tille 1
5 076 42
Oebt Serv ce.
21 580 00
Effective c
December 31
State)
&lt;15 144 86 Total Regular In
Non programmed
2 25466 Restricted Grants
Total school dlst
1980
662 20 Ttlle IV B
2nd
Pnze
Hot
structJon
5
844
90
GARAGE SAL.E Apr 9 &amp;
Ttlle VI B
12 376 09
Charges
17 791 86
oOtslde mtllage
Total- Clerk Treasurers
Total Vocat anal
'" Atd I Through
potnt Refngerator
Tota l - Al l
Transfers
29 954 35
10 From 9 5 at the Bill
PubliShed B
Ba lance Dec 31
Instruction
1
State)
54
494
04
813
67
Funds
Refund of Prior
200 120 63 Transfers
Effective
D
1980
5 415 07
Brown
s Residence on N
Freezer
and
Operat1on
29 954 35
Less
Years
Total
SCHEDULE A II
Main Sl In Rutland Phone
Matnt of Plant
Total
All
lrd
Prtze
Encumbrances
Published B
Receipts
SUMMARY OF
11&gt;32 52
Serv1 ces
21 742 2777
Electric chain
237 84 Total
Receipts
1 737 482 41
Dec 31 1980
All
Effective D
CASH BALANCES
Food
serv1css
Mtcrowave Ovens
72
386
SPECIAL
RECEIPTS
21
21 saw
Singer
sewing
Exp
1
691
115
30
SCHEDULE
OF
RECEIPTS AND Local Funds
Total Support
BY SOURCE AND
machine with cabinet nice
General (unrestricted
DEBT
SERVICE
4th
Prtze
EXPENDITURE~
Services CAPITAL OUTL.AY
RECEIVII'jG
clean clothes etc
montes&gt;
51 953 99
REQUIREMENTS
FUND
Business
EXPENDITURES
72 664 05
FUND
Homellte
s trmg
Food
SerVIces
18
20
TO MATURITY
General
Total All
BY
OBJECT
AND
Stale
Rece1pts
Untform School
Year 1981
Balance Aug 26
tnmmers
Ex p
80 282 62
TYPEOFFUNO
Unrestricted
5 family yard sale Thurs,
Suppl es
Prlnctpal
1980
4 783 31
11000
2 566 29
L.ocal Funds
Local Funds
State and Federal
&amp; Frl Aprll9 &amp; 10 9? 2U
Tot
a&gt;
All
Interest
Tolal
9
947
50
General Fund
Funds
Food Serv ce
Plus 65 G E
3 120 73
Total
Funds
56 645 50 Total
Rece1pts
20 941 50 Peart St Middleport, Oh
17 675 50
Regular
All Special
Instruction
Net Balance
Year 1982
Some turntturt
glass,
Tota l Disburse
Clock Radtos
Instruct on
105 15
Tota
l
Spec
tal
Recetpts
3
120
73
Prl~c lpal
11 000 clothing
Dec 31 1910
ments
15 179 16
anllqun, etc
1
602
74
Vocattonat
262
1•
lnstruct•on
State
Recetpts
Loca l Funds
Interest
9 315 00 Rain cancels 992 2NI
Balance Dec 31
Supp Serv - Pupils
'
Gut dance
Restricted
Total
19 682 50
1980
5 062 63 General (unrestr.cted
.uo
Thru
F
I
sea
I
Stale
Funds
Services
00
Year 1983
monies)
87 933 39 DISadvantaged
Services
1 193 62
Total Support
~~~~J:;it~rotect
Bond Ret re
PrinCipal
11 000 CARPORT SAL.E April 10
Operat1on
and
Pupil Program
Servicesment
Interest
8 682 50 &amp;. 11 9 4 Township Rd 79
21
026
81
Matnt
of
Plant
DPPF
14 467 68
Pupils
430 00
Tfr.i
2,04114 Food Serv ces
Reg1ster &amp; Wm'
Total
19 682 50 fst mobile home on left
12 115 34 Total All Spectal
Serv1ces
92900
Educattonat Medta
Year 1984
Uniform School
Sub-Total All
Receipts
14
467
68
ces
7
090
08
Serv
11 000 Wood table &amp; 4 chelrs
Supplies
(1 809 30)
Equipment
Federal Recetpls
Total Support
2490 53 1Prlnctpal
State
Funds
nterest
8
oso
oo .===;~;;:::::::7'==
1 688 70
Regul•r In
(Received lhru
Services B
Dec 31
Disadvantaged
'
Public fthce
Total
19 050 00 I
Public hie
structlon
State
I
719
00
Instructional
352 44
Puptl Program
Year 1915
&amp; • ctl 011
7
090
08
Special
In
Unrestricted
Staff
Principal
11&lt;000
~u
(DPPF )
4 252 52
Total
11
55
'
strucllon
Local Funds
56800 Interest
F1scal Serv1ces
7
4lt 50
Educot onal Tete
NOTICE
Balance Aug 26
Supp
Serv
Puptls
45 144 86 Total Support
Food Service
vision
Tot•t
18 417 50
47 00 Total
Offers will be recetved by
1980
4 lilJ7 riJ
thru Fiscal
All Special
Services Year 1986
OHIO RIVER
Federal Funds
the undersigned at h s of
Tota l
11
55
Serv
ces
7741
47
Receipts
&lt;15144
86
Business
Principal
11 000
5 078 ~2
flee In Bani&lt; One Build ing
Recetpts
17 675 00 Tille I
Operation and
Total All
Rederal Receipts
AUCTION
Interest
6 765 00
Tille IV B
2 254 86 (Received thru
In Pomeroy Ohio unit I the Total D sburse
Malnt of Pl•nt
Exp
9
134 37
Total
17785
00
Tile
VI
B
lOth day Of April 1981 at
12
376
09
ments
16 867 86
SerVICeS
68~ 90
capt tal Outlay
State&gt;
Year 1987
Tolai - AII
10 00 o clock AM lor the Net Transfers
Will be - l l l t l l 11ftrY
Trans Svcs (Pupils)
Restricted
General Fund
Principal
11 000
Funds
143
275
13
purchase of the lot tow ng
ln(Out)
000
Frldoy nlthl et 7.II
through
Other
Support
Feder•t Funds
I nstrucflon
1
nterest
6
152
50
described real estate of aatance Dec 31
Svcs
400 00 Totel
ESEA Title I
Total Regular
RECEIPT$ BY
P
m ....lnnlntt Alll'll
17 152 50 1
Roger Adams deceased
1980
5 ~15 07
(Disadvantaged
SOURCE AND
Instruction
82415 Sub Total All
1flh IOCIIW et tile HertYear 19M
Tract 1 Being a 88 acre
1 certify the •bove report
Replace
RECEIVING
Youth)
30 3~21M Tot• I vocational
Principal
11 000
ford Community IIIII..
tract of real estate Situated to be correct
Equip
10 113 37
FUND
ESEA Title
Instruction
8JO 76
I ntornt
5
520
Hartford,
W VI, Lell tf
In Merton
Townshtp
(Signed)
Replacement SchOol
General Fund
IVB
246000 Supporting Services
Total
16 520
Hocking county~ Ohto
Ellen Bell
&amp; ullll mll'dlllt
Buses
24.133 s..
Receipts from L.ocal Sour Title VI B
20 254 00 Guidance
YHr 1'"
Glu
lhlrestlllltntl
situated on ~tale 1&lt;oute 93
Clerk Treasurer Ices
116 as
stole ana F,..r11
Total All Special
Sotvlces
Prtncl~l
11 000
approximately 2 mtles
IYIIIallle
of !he Boerd 1 Ta~es
79
92
l'unds
Health
Services
Receipts
SJ 0561M
I
nteresf
Hal
50
East Of L.Oilan, Ohio
Jenlftr Scnmldt
Spect•ttn
Speech Pathology
General PropertyTotal
Total
15 887
·Former 1 Real Esl•fe
Tract 2 An undivided
stru~tlon
2 331 21
and
Audiology
Local
Funds
Yeor1990
Auctt••
1
one half Interest In 61
Clerk Treasurer
Services
41265 59
7 455 00 Supp Serv - Pupils
292 336 06 Food Service
!Gross&gt;
Prine I~ I
fOh
77f-1471
111100
acres
more or less (4) 8 He
fhru Fiscal
Disadvantaged
Total St~pport
T•nglble Personal
lntere$1
4 255 00

2

In Memonam

2H1~

Wonted to Buy

12

WANTED
TO BUY
GOL.O
SILVER
PLATINUM STERLING
COINS RINGS ~EWELR
y
MISC
ITEMS AB
SOL.UTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTEO EO
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP
MIDDL.EPORT
OHI0992 3rl76
OL.O COINS pocket wat
ches class rings wedding
beMs diamonds Gold or
sliver Call J A Wamsley
Treasure Chest Coin Shop
Athens OH 59~ ~221
wanted to Buy class rings
wedding bands anything
stamped lOK l~K or IBK
gold Silver coins pocket
watches Call Joe Clark at
992 2054 at Clarks Jewelry
Store Pomeroy Ohio 45769

I RON AND BRASS BEDS
Old furnllure desks gotd
rings
lewelry
s tver
dollars sterling etc Wood
ICe boxes Iars ant ques
etc complete households
Write M D Mtller Rt 4
Pomeroy OH
&lt;15769 Or
c•ll 992 77/IJ
New used and antique fur
nlture No ttem to Iaroe or
to small Wtll buy one ptece
or complete households
M•rlln s General Store at
992 1&gt;370
Now buymg gold and
s lver old pocket watches
chams d1amonds stlver
mone-; and coins Mart n s
General Store Middleport
992 6370

11

GET VALlJABLE tratn ng
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen
t~nel route carrier Phone
us nght away and get on
the ellgtblhty list at 992
2156 or 992 2157
_
$185 00 to $500 weekly dong
matllng work
No ex
penence requtred
AP
PLY Circle Sales P 0
Box 224 D Rtchmond Htll
NY 11418
WANTED People lo
Avon
Work your
hOurs Part ltme or
lim If tnleresled call
2354 or 742 2755

sell
own
full
742

LEAD Vocalist lookmg tor
progressive rock band or
le•d guitarist wanted Con
tact Gary Ftfe 992 3627 or
992 5026 anyttme

Happy Scarecrow!
\

Tw~ bedroom
furnished
apartment 992 5rl34 or 1
304 882 2566

45

Wtll babystltn my home In
Syracuse or yours Ex
penenced and wlfl Stl any
age Phone 992 3110 992
2719 or 949 2791

Sleepmg rooms by lhe
week
K lichen
and
televiSion lounge Carryout
store and restaurant w1thln
500 feet 992 1&gt;370

HONEST
respectable
Pract cat Nurse will stay
w lh SICk or elderly 992
2055

Pr1vate sleeping rooms
wtth cooking faclllt es atr
condtflonlng and cable tv
773 5651

46
SpocetorRtnl
COUNTRY
MOBILE Home
Park Route 33 North of
Pomeroy Large lots Call
992 7479

AUTOMOBILE
fN
SURANCE
been
can
celled•
Lost
your
operator s hcense' PhOne
992 2143

32

Wtll do all types of car Furnace repatrs etectncal
penter work Experienced work
plumb ng
mobtle
and responSible No Job
home or reSidence 992
btg or to small Phone 992 5858
9
3 41 anyhme

T~~l:urse-

\

,Ill

0~

!P!.!'ce

oo
oo

so

H-nl•••lfY,

Hours
Mon Tues 9 6
Weds Fn 9 7
Sat 9 5
Closed Thurs

Mob1le Homes
for Sale
1972 Regency 12x60 2
bedroom mobtle home new
stove B. refrigerator new
carpet natural oas heat
washer &amp; dryer 992 6711

41

ICeepTh ~Ad lor FuiOreRelerei'Ke

APPLIANCE SERVICE

Real Estate- General

flousing
Headquarters

T

EAFORDlB

VIRGIL B SR ,,. 0'
_ 16 E Second Street

21 ACRES - of h gh
land w•th m1nerals and
TP water Good house
s tes only $15 000
LARGE - 4 bedroom
sta tely hom e w1th 2
baths In town near
schools and stor es Cen
tral heat w th wood
burner
supplement
N ce glass enclosed
back porch large 2 car
garage and overs zed
lot
FAMILY HOME 5
bedroom s new bath
natural gas furnace
heatmg
c1ty water
family room
dtntng
room Lots of panel ng
and n1c e carpetmg
Large lot
COUNTRY HOME NICe 3 bedroom home
w1th large fenced yard
a1 d good
bus1ness
bu1ld ng tor your part
t1me bus ness Roomy
home w1th new Siding
central heal and dnlled
well You II like thiS for
only 531 000
TOWN - Good 7 room
home w th bath forced
a r natural gas furnace
3 bedrooms
six
carpeted
basement
Garage and ntce lot
ASking 527 500
IN TEN YEARS THE
SPACE YOU RENT
YOU PAY FOR BUT
NEVER OWN CALL.
992 3325 TO HAVE

Bnck house on wooded lot
Three bedrooms large k I
chen t•mtly room double
garage deck Mtd S1Xf1es
9'12 5~20
SIX room farmhouse With
bath and double garage on
one acre and one half of
ground Located on Rl 7 at
Five Potnls
$41 500 00
Also an acre and one half of
ground located near the
fatrgrounds S4000 oo 992

Generol

2571
32

Mobtle Homes
for Sale

1973 Crown Haven 14 x 65
three bedtooms new car
pet 1971 Cameron 14 x 64
two bedrooms new carpet
1972 Champ on 12 x 60 two
bedrooms new carpel 1976
Cameron 12 x 60 two
bedrooms •II eleclnc 1971
Skyline
12sx 6)
two
bedrooms b•fh
new
ca rpet
1970
PMC
12 x 60 two bedrooms new
carpet B x S Sales tn c
2nd x Vtand Street Potnt
Pleasant WV Phone 675
4424

a. v,

2 bedroom house tn country
for older man or woman
949 2801 No Sunday calls
;:::=o:;:
b;:;
ll=
e :;;H;:o=:
m::e=:s= =
4;::2= =M
for Rent
2 bedroom Mobile Home
Adults only
Browns
Trailer Court Mmersv1lle
992 3324
MOBILE HOME for rent
Completely
furniShed
Adults preferred DepoSit
992 2749
Two trailers for rent fur
n shed a r cond1t on1ng
c•ble tv 773 5651

53

ATTENTION
(IM
PORTANT TO YOU) Wilt
pay cash or certified check
for ant1ques and collec
t bles or enttre estates
Nothtng too large Also
guns pocket wat ches and
cotn collect ons Call 614
767 3167 or 557 3411

He sthe most endear ne doll as

he flops UJto funny POSIItons

Charm achtld cheerthe team on
deco1a1e a bed wtth th s stl ly
scarecrow He s 48 1nches tall
crocheted from top to toe of syn
thettc worsted !Clips Pattern
7491 eesy dtecllons
S2 00 lo1 each pattern Add 504
each pattern lo1 I 1st class '"
mali and handline Stnd Ill:

==Dept

117

The Dally Senttnel

-'IIIII IU 01~ a.. Sll N..
Ytrl, NT 10113 Prill NAHr-. llp Plllllnl N1111111f
Catch on lo tile craft boom! Send
fo1 OUI NEW 198t NEEOLECRAH
CATALOG Ove1 172 des,ens 3
~ee ~=ns lnstde $1 00

AU

IOOIIS. .$1 75 udl
1)4.14 OlfcllllciJIM Qlilll
13UIIillll ... Qlll1itl
132-011111111111*

131"" •*' Qlllts

130-SIIIII fllilfiii.SIIIIJI.51

1Jt.OIIcl '1' liiJ TIIMhn

I~ Plkllwt
121~ • Dllilll

Qlilll

IJS.- Cllfll fltwlls

125-hlll Qlilll

12U.IIIII't

o.-ts

1~''1£

• 1U·SIIII I hll
l»CCIII If•

.u:;;111" ,._,

CIICfllt

::~ ~~:.

'
CIICfllt
diU ; I I .
. 1.............. . .
. ,........ Clllilll

,.,._ r=

III.... W

M I

NEW LISTING - Tup
pers Pla1ns n1 ce ranch
type home Wtlh 3 bed
rooms carpel patiO
storage butl9tng In good
IOcahon on a level 3!..
acre tot Priced to sell
$32 500 00
OWNER WILL HEL.P
FINANCE • - This 5
bedroom home In e~
cellent condtllon can be
yours Located near the
new bndge 1t has a nice
k tchen spac ious living
dmmg room enclosed
sun porch basement
NICe lot $32 000 00
GOOD
STARTER
HOME
With 3
bedrooms d lntng ltv
tng ktlchen larg~ l'h
acre lot near town
$25 000 00
CENTRAL. AIR FOR
THE COMING SUM
MERt - A one floor
plan with 3 bedrooms
full basement
nice
p•tlo
carpeting
In
town $21 500 00
COUNTRY COTTAGE
- 3 bedrooms full basement •Jumtnum Siding
Needs
some
redecorating $14 500 00
BORDERS FORKED
RUN L.AKE - 13 acres
of recreation land
Great for hunting and
fishing M,OOO 00
WE HAVE OVER 10
PROPERTIES
TO
CHOOSE FROM
FI
NANCING
AVAIL.
AIL.E OPEN fS MON
SAT

REA~
ell , Jr

Henry I

"
1TES
ASSOC
Jun Trusltll Nf ""'
Roger&amp; DollleTurner

msm

OFFICitnnst

m

All new Hallmark
Homes startmg at
510,983 for 14' W1de,
2BR
Payments Approx
1.. 00 per mo Finane
lng Avaoloblo

KINGSBURY
HOME SJIFS
INC.
110E MoinSI
Pomtroy Ohio
99270~

Osborn Rd
Reedsv1lle Oh
3 16 1 mo

ROOFING

SERVICE
For all of your w1r

mg needs

SpectaiiZing In
Re Rooftng
• Small Carpenter Jobs

Let George Mtller check
your present electr cal
system
Res denhal
&amp; Commercial

Darrell Brewer
PH 992 2882
992 2606
992 7861
31 11mopd

Call 742 3195
or 992 7680
2 8 He

3 11 1 m o

ROGER HYSEU.'S
GARAGE
- Auto and Truck
Repatr
- Transmtss1on
Repatr
Hrs Mon Fr
9AM530PM

HJ

50 -20 30 H P
A60 - 2S60HP
60 - 45 80 H P

PARTS

All Models
Ava lable
LEOMORRI5
Rt lS1de H1IIRd
Ru11and OtJ

992

5682
10 7 rtc

2 9 He

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

ALL STEEL

KITCHEN
CARPET
From

7.99 &amp; up

1

eH eat Pumps
e E lectr cHeat ng
&amp; W r ng
I ndustna Cam mere al
and Res dent al

12.95 &amp; up

1

Installed

Buy Now &amp; Save $2 $6 Per Yard
25 rolls carpet 1n stock to p1ck from
Regular backed carpel mstalled free,
w1fh pad
Dr1veA Little- Save A Lot

Root Estate

DIUDN
REAL ESTATE
4 ACRES of vacant land

on hardtop ro•d Ideal

IhU

RE~E
TRENCHING
SERVICE

U F 0 kites 216 E 2nd St
Pomeroy
INTERNATIONAL Cub
Cadet 12 h p 42 mower
good cond
Hudrostatlc
$1 650
Days 992 5545
even ngs 949 2216

Water Sewer Electnc
Gas Lme 01tches
water Lme Hoole ups
Sephc Tanks
county Cert1hed
Roush Lane
Cheshtre Oh
Ph 367 7560
1 7 tf c

bu1ld1ng site or tra1ler
IQI
1 ACRE on hardtop
road 1 mile from Mtd
dleport All set up tor
trailer or home site
2 STORY duple~ Close
to schools shOpp ing and

2 atr condtlioners 6 000
BTU 5 000 BTU like new
992 3791
Locust posts Sl 25 each
Calli 614 698 8211

63

POOl

u

sows ready to have P os
985 4194

2 OR 3 BEDROOM cot
tage w ith 2 •cres of
land lust off Rt 7
Fay Monley
BranchMgr
Phone "2 2591

OWNERS L.EAVING AREA - 3 BR brick home
close to New Ravenswood Bridge &amp; Keiser Plant
This home Is clean has F P and much of the fur
nlture and appliances can be negotiated 1~ mor
tgage can be assumed Asking 139 900
CHESTER AREA - 1 mile off Rl 7 3 BR home
eat tn kitchen, forlnol OR extra spacious LR for
ftmly living, entertaining Home heated by wood
bUrner alone but has alternate system 'l.ovely for
country ciON to town living Has fenced In arta for
farm animals, above ground swimming pool and
fruit trees Owner may help finance Rrlced at
TUPPERS PL.AINS - Well kept 3 B R ranch on
large tot Feeturn wood burner In brick lOlling
carpet oak trim garage with low heating billS
Priced In tile low 30's
RO!DSVILLE VILLAGE l'h story 3 BR
rlmodeltd kttc!Mn with loadS of cabinets L.aroe tot
with garden space 131,500
CALL. US TO IUY OR Sl L.L
Nancy Jalltll'l- AISOCia..
1
PH 143 2075
Vil'lllnte Mayman- Allocla..
PH fl5-41f7

Pets for Sale

AKC collie puppies M•tes
$150 fem•tes $125 S•bte
while wormed f irst puppy
shots first parvo shOts 1
61A 647 3815

..... -- ... ...
-··
__
,, ...
....·-··
...··"·
.
'

~

"

Form Equi!Jmenf

Kuker 400 gal spray tnt
540 4X16 plows M F 13 5

Disc
fert auger 1 set
snap on 15 5x38 ctuattlres
N H. 367 Manure Spreder
Dunham 14 Harogator
tnt tractor 986 304675
2245
Used R &lt;40 Ditch Witch
Trencher 161~ 694 7842
Four 15 000 gallon tanks
located tbove ground at
Athens
Ohio
S3 000 00
each Phone I 304 422 2711

L.IV81111Ck
3 Polled Htreford bulls 1
2""
old 2 at about400

Y""

lbl taCh 992 7rl51

BeautifUl Custom
BUilt Garages
Call for free s1dmg
estimates 949 2801 or
949 286ll
No Sundav Calls
3 11 lfc

3 11 1 mo

742 2211

General

SIDING CO.

Ph Pomeroy
614 992 7038

RUTLAND FURNITURE

CENTRAL REALTY

165 000

ANN'S CAKE
DECORATING
SUPPLIES

Mlu.ER ELECTRIC

Wtndow cranks
Mobtle Home Root
coattng
MObile Home Doors
Mobile Home Lock Sets
Mobile Home Anchors
Mobile Home Awnings
Mob ole

Main Sf

New 1981
Models

20,.-30,.
ALL CAKE
DECORATING
SUPPLIES

*

1980

9662

7583
3 24 1 mo

320 4th St Rae me Oh
PH 949 2777
*Complete Auto and
Truck Repa.r
*Rebuilt Automahc
Transm ss1ons
on
most Amencan MOdel
Cars
*1225 OD Parts &amp; Labor
PIUS FlUid
* 24 Hour Wrecker
Serv1ce
Tnple A Aff1l1afed
4 6 1 mo

Mobtle
Edges

Installed
68x14 4 bedroom
Sl 500 off 1975 Hollypark
70x1~ 2 bedroom 1970 Kit
24x60 3 bedroom
1979
Elcona 70x14 3 bedroom
1979 Brls!ol 70x14 2
bedroom 1977 Sherwood
P•rk 70X14 3 bedroom
Kanauga Mobile Home
Sales Kanaug Ohto 446

Rheem Amana
&amp; Carner
AIR CONDITIONERS
&amp; HEAT PUMPS
Ph 614 992 7038

MOBILE
HOME

2 bedroom apartment In
Pomeroy 992 5621

Ph 992

Mtsc Merchan1se

54

Apartment
for Rent

TRAILER for sale or re~l
12xlilJ 2 bedroom l'h baths
Alfred Oh 985 4210

m

GAlli A
REFRIGERATION
INC.

Ant1ques

acres wtlh 70~1~ trailer 2
car garage 20x27 3 m les
from Ractne on Co Rd 28
Callafler5p m 949 2618

4 year old double wtde
64x24 Exc cond must be
moved
from
present
toc•lton College Rd Low
s20 s
2638

SALE

12 Years
Expenence
Greg Roush

Household Goods

FOR SALE - One Early
Amer can used sofa S60
see at 256 So Fourth Mtd
dleport

Uldtl es
patd
Two
bedroom mob le home and
one bedroom apartment
One chtld accepted John
Speets 3 and one half miles
south of Middleport on Rt

44

C&amp;AAUTO REPAIR

PARTS AND SERVICE
ALL MAKES
• w;une ~
• D sposah
, Orye"
• 0 shwa shers
•~ a nge s
•Hoi Water Tanh
Repa r ng 5 nee 11'53

Camps1tes for rent on
scen1c nverbank Uhhtles
paid Sm•ll trailers only
Phone 773 5651

7

ex

tenstveremodehng
e ElectriCal work
e R OOitng work

Call Ken Young

992 3954

51

New Homes

Roaches
Btrds
Rodents Sp ders Fleas
Ants and other small n
sect control
FREE ESTIMATES
1 or 5 year termtte
guarantee
Located tn GallipoliS
Ph 614 446 2801
3 21 1 mo

n

Houses for Rent

CONSTRIJCnON

PEST CONTROL

r~~~~~~~3~2~9~3~m~o~~~::::::::::::::;:::~::::::::::::::~~~

Rentals

Real Estate

APRIL 8-llth

77 FREE
PRIZES

TUENS SPORT
A,In
l'l re!'
CY
\IL.Lt)
SltmsonAve Athens

Southern
Valley forMobtle
-==::::;:;;::::;=;~;:;::::==
r[§~~~~~§§1~:::~~~~~~;l Home
TRAILER spaces
rent
Wanted to Do
Park Cheshire Oh

;;;
18

ROUSH

TERMITE and

Furnished Rooms

Insurance

Housing
Head uartP.rs

POMEROY
lANDMARK
SPRING SALE

s

Business Services

NEWL. Y remodeled 1
bedroom apt furnished
utilities Included 992 3190

a.

s

by larry Wright

REPAIR or remadl!llng
work floors doors wall
panelmg ceiling or floor
tile Sldtng 992 2759

Phone
1 1614) 992 3325

Help Wanted

'N' CARLYLE TM

WOMAN Seek ing em
ployment Hospital Dr of
flee of Clinic as recep
tlomst or Medical records
Any shtrl or days Know
med cal
terminology
References 7~2 2030

U
CHIP WOOD Poles max
diameter 14 on largest
end S12 50 perton Bundled
slab
$10 50 per ton
Delivered to Ohio Pallet
Co
Rock Spr ngs Rd
Pomeroy 992 268'1

Situations Wonted

.. .. .
.. ......
'' .. ' ...•' ... '.
~

~

Autos for Sate

1980 TRANSAM Cheap 301
engine with turbo charge
auto trans
ac
cruise
control am fm radio with
stereo power wtndoWs.
stearlng &amp; disc brakes Till
wheel 992 5307 after 5 p m
1980 MONZA 2 plus 2 Hat
Chback 4 CYI 4 Speed a C
am fm stereo 31 m p g
black with red Interior
6 000 miles 992 1&gt;316
72

Trvcks lor Salt

1971 INTERNATIONAL
cab over engine series 1600
good tires Phone -2~7 2642
JohnN Hill

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

i'i

J&amp;C

SANITATION
SERVICE

All tvp es of roof work
new or r ep a~r gutters
and downspouts gutter
cl ca nmg and pamt ng
All work guaranteed

Trash P1ckup In
The V1llage of
Middleport, Oh

Free Eshmates
Pnces

~easonable

(&lt;Ill Howard

Ph 992 5016
or 992 7505
3 111 mo

949 2862
949 2160

2 4 tt c

13

Livestock

._._

71

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

Dltcher work Gas water
Electric Installed 742 2819
before 9 00 p m
t mprovements

Gene s C•rpet Cleaning
deep stream extraction
Free
estlm a!ed
reasonable rates
scot
chqu•rd 992 6309 or 742
2211
French City Painting
Residential commercial
Interior
exterior
Specfallrlng In I ntertor
painting paper hangmg
!e~tured
ceilings
Free
estimates 367 7784 or 367
7160

84

E lectrlcol
&amp; Refrigeration

SEWING
MACHINE
Repatrs
service
all
makes! 992 2284
The
Fabric Shop
Pomeroy
Authonred Singer Sales
•nd Service We sharpen
Scissors

a.

EL.WOOD
BOWERS
RE PAl R Sweepers
to•sters Irons all small
appliances Lawn mower
Nexl to Slate Highway
Garage on Route 7 985
3825

WATER
WEL LS
Domntlc and commercl•l
pump sales •nd service
Tom
Lewis
Drill ing
Se•sonal discount on pum
ps 1 301 B'IS 3802 or 1 30~

Av•llabloto handle all your
electrical needs Repairs
wiring
rewiring
In
stallatlon
moalflc•llons
revisions
residential
business No lob to

12

Plumbing
&amp; H"tlnp

895

)6.11

Boatund
Motors for Sltt

1977 Stercnfl lrl haul 17
toot boat Mats 8 full top
canvas 120 h p Mercury
Crvlw Inboard outboard
with f)OMr trim
lkls
llfelackets. and trailer In
eluded 1000 00 992 3792

Excav~tlng

S3

I;1!~~;:·:~,~~,~mallBillAvailable
Cadle at

EXCIYIIIng

COMPLETE

sever In
&amp; beckhoe ser
vice for Racine-Syracuse
MWer Cllstrlct Dozer work

needed 949 2293

L.awrence Manley&amp;. hlsson
still hauling tralh and
his customers can 11111 put
their trash out to be picked
up

�.

•

'.

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Marianne E. Nutter to Harold L.
Nutter, Parcels, Orange.
Robert B. Cleek, Neva J. Cleek to
Elsie Cross, Easement, Sutton.
Leonard Gilmore, dec. to Mary
Darst, Millard Gilmore, Luther
Gilmore, aka Martian Luther
Gilmore, aka Martin L. Gilmore,
Cert. of Trans., Salisbury.
James L. Hunt, Barbara A. Hunt
to Herbert L. Miller, Frances M.
Miller, 6,000 sq. ft., Letart.
Eugene C. Johnston, Wanda ~·
JohnstoR to Southern Ohio Coal Co.,
13/16 of an acre, Salem.
C. W. Proffitt, Myrtle Proffitt to
James E. Diddle, Right of way,
Lebanon.
Willard Walker, Faye Walker to
Gerald G. Jacks, Jo Aim L. Jacks,
.25 Acre , Parcel, Salem.
Flossie Hull Phillips, dec. to
Stanley Phillips, Cert. of trans. ,
Rutland.
Dale C. Warner, Marybelle Warner, George H. Warner, Grace M.
Warner to Glen D. Werry , Parcels,
Bedford.
Ullian Marlene Hall, Jay Hall, Jr.
to Ohio Power Co., Easement,
Letart .
Charl es C. King, Rosalie King to
Robert Thomas Calhoun, Jr., Linda
Christine Calhoun, Parcels, Scipio.
Foler Alkire, Mildred I. Alkire to
Leading Cre ek Cons. Dist.,
Easement, Scipio.
James Crisp to Leading Creek
Cons. Dist., Easement, Salem.
Thomas D. Crisp, Mary F. Crisp to
Lead1ng Cree k Cons. Dist.,
Easement, Salem.
James Fenton Taylor, Jeannie T.
Taylor to Leading Creek Cons. Dis!.,
Easement. Rutland.
Pauline Gorby, Carl Gorby to
Leadi ng Creek Cons. Dist.,
Easement, Rutland.
Langsville Christian Church to
Leadin g Cree k Cons. Dist. ,
Easement, Rutland.
Ida May Richmond to Leading
Creek Cons. Dist., Easement,
Rutland.
Robert E. Bissell, Sally L. Bissell
to Racine Home National, Parcels,
Chester.
Mabel E. Johnson to Clifford E.
Manley, Emily Faye Manley, Lot,
Middleport.
Avis F. Jackson to Kathleen
Bissell, Bruce Bissell, 1.01 A.,
Chester.
Johnie F. Evans aka Jolm F.
Evans, Thelma Mae Evans to Tessie
Evans, Parcels, Sutton.
Carlos Chavarria , Brenda
Chavarria to Joseph Bettennazzi,
Parcel, Bedford.
Francis S. Roush, dec'd., to Minnie S. Roush, Edson E. Roush,
Stanley Roush, Ada F. Warner,
Katie Curtis, Cert. of Trans., Sutton.
Minnie S. Roush, dec' d., to Edson
E. Roush, Stanley Roush, 'Ada F.
Warner, Katie Curtis, Cert. of
Trans., Sutton.
Stanley Roush, Bertha Roush, Ada
F. Warner, Katie Curtis to Edson E.
Roush, Sutton.
Harry Osborne, Jr., Mary E.
Osborne to James E. Diddle, R-W, •
Salisbury.
David F. Hanson to James C. Diddle, R·W, Rutland.
Dennis R. Howell, Norma Howell
to James E. Diddle, R-W, Rutland.
F. Berl Boggs, Ida May Boggs,
Robert D. Boggs, Shirley I. Boggs to
Norman L. Yost, T. Jeanne Bird
Yost. Parcels, Orange.
Evelyn B. Thomas to Paul F.
Thomas, Pa rcels, SaliEbury.
Paul F. Thomas, frances M.
Thomas to Evelyn B. Thomas, 25.664
A., Salisbury.

-...

Property·owners
may ·get tax break.
. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - An attempt is expected to be made in the
Senate to broaden the impsct of a
House-passed property tax relief biD
affecting Ohio's 88 counties.
If the effort Is successful, l'll8idential and. fann property owners in
nearly half the countieS would enjoy
reductions in their tax bil!B beyond
those provided in the House
measure, according to backers.
AJJ it emerged from the House, the
bill slightly would reduce
homeowners' real estate taxes next
year by offsetting past shifts in the
tax burden that have fallen more

Release WIC

pick~up

Aschedule for Meigs Countians to
pick up their May and June WlC
program coupons was announced
today.
Participant.'l are to pick up their
coupons on the following appointed
days and times at the Meigs County
Health Department:
A thru C - Friday (9-11 a.m.
only ), April10; D thru H- Monday

A tti\'Cf'

~ •r I:.L'Il'L Apnl! '-).

It's a beau t/lu i way lo

Jprt~ad

somiJ

foster joy Send a traditiona l Holiday
We ron del iver anyw here in th is oreo

f

or almost anywhere rn th e world . So
coli or rome by soon And .be o smon

'

bunny

f

" flofwJIA-IUI-IIOVI"
IN l•rt.rflut Ave.
Otl .
HH12t

,,.,m.,., or

acct,t 111 majo r crtclil

e~nlt ,

ln4 wt wl rt floWtrs

Omittted .from the Meigs Junior
High School fourth sii weeks honor
roll was Rodd Harrison, son of Phil
and Paulette Harrison of near
Pomeroy.

•.

Nothing can change the looks of a room more quickly
and more dramatically than wall covering .

enttne
1 section, 11 Pages 1S Cents
A Mullimectia Inc. Newseaper

~

If you have trouble choosing patterns and colors, our

·decorating consultant will come to your home (at no ·
charge to you) and help you decide.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

1

V

.....

I
I
I
I
I
If
f

• Ofler good until May 30, 1981.

BANK
ONE™
BANK ONE OF POMEROY; NA
Pomeroy • Rutland • Tuppers Plains

'&gt;.

Sleep

7~
·. ".
11

• Addihonal Tests tor A;ght &amp;
Maneuvering · Doors Closed
Dtorbit

• Maneuvering Eng1nes Fired to Slow Down
7. Entry; Before Penetrat1ng the Atmosphere
•Beg1ns Glid1ng Approach 4.300
Nautical Miles from Edwards AlB

v

a. L1ndlng ;

8

· - ~./
:::,.....---Ap

• Speed 223.55 Miles Per Hour
• Touch 54 Hrs. 28 Min

L,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....,.

COLUMBIA'S nJGHT - Gnphleab0111 plaJmed activities of 1be space abuttle Columbia during Us
mluioa. (APLuerpholo)

Cuts

c~ming

WASHINGTON (AP) - President
Reagan Is getting nearly all the tax
and spending cuts he wants from
RepubUCBDII controlling the Senate
Budget Conunlttee, but at a higher
cost than the administration counted
on.
The COilUIIittee agreed on a partyline vote Wednesday to make room
in the 1982 budget for the $51.3 billion
in tax cuts Reagan has proposed.
But it said the result will be a $60
blllim budget deficit In 1982 - $15
billion higher than the administration figured and $10 bllllon
higher than House Democrats
predicted.
.
Sen. Pete V. Domenici, R-N.M.,
the Budget Conunittee chalnnan.
said Wednesday night that Reagan
"may have to find adminlstrative
savings beyond anytblng we've
imagined," but he exp1 eaaed confidence the president can do it.
Domenici said he had no further
cuts in mind to llignlficantly slice the
projected deficit, which wu
recalculated from the admlnlstratim's own numbers.
"We have given the president
everything he uked for," Domenicl

Winning Ohio louery number
CLEVELAND - The winning nwnber selected Wednesday night in
theOhio!AJttery's dally game "TheNwnber" wu619.
The lottery reported earnings of $381,111111.50 from money wagered on
the pme. Lottery offlciallllllid sales were $981,595. Holders of winning tickets are entitied to llhare $000,500.50.

Weather

at high price

said.
That, argued Demo.::·:,!s on the
panel, was a rniatake.
Sen. Ernest F. Hollinga of South
Carolina, the ranking Democrat on
the committee, said there is ''no way
to lnf)ate the economy" with a large
tax cut "and then, 'whoopee,' get a
balanced budget."
Sen. Gary Hart, D-Colo., said the

corrunittee wss "rather blindly
following" wbat he called the administration's "extraordinary experiment" in economics.
In the House, meanwhile,
majority Democrat.'l stepped• up
their counteroffensive against the
Reagan program, calling it "the
fiscal equivalent of faith in a free
lunch."

·Worker escapes injury
Carl Withrow, employed with the Ont.srio Pipe Go. , which is installing sewage lines in Racine, escaped serious injury or possible
death Wedneaday when he WIIS buried under some four to five feet of
dirt when an excavation gave way.
According to a report by the Racine Emergency Squad, called to the
scene at 12 noon, a cage wu being placed in the excavatioo when the
side of the dug out ares gave way. Withrow fell into the excavation
and was covered by the dirt. He told squad members that he never lost
consciousness and that there was apparently an air pocket which
allowed him to breath Ughtly.
Co-workers with their hands and small tools removed the dirt from
Withrow who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital by the squad.
He wu treated and released. The squad l'eported that he suffered
shoulder and ankle injuries and bruises but no broken bones.

Space
launch
ready
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)Everything is "go" for launch on
Friday. The astronauts, the
weather, the launch crews and the
spaceship Colwnbia - poised on it.'l
historic pad, glistening with
promiae.
The two men who will fly the
revolutionary ship, John Young and
Bob Crippen, were to make practice
landings today in executive jet.s
modified to handle like the space
shuttle Colwnbia.
" We look forw'ard to the flight, "
Young said on arrival bere. He then
joined Crippen for an hour's aerial
acrobatics, flying loop-the-loop
acrobatic maneuvers to improve
their proficiency for the orbital
mission.
The countdown was on schedule even a little ahead of time - aiming
for a liftoff at 6:50 a.m. EST. A
spokesman for the Ns,ponal
Aeronautics and Space Administration called ongoing prelaunch preparations "uneventlul."
Air Force weather officers
forecast decent conditions for
Friday morning.
On launch pad ~A. from which
Apollo llleft Earth for man's first
walk on the moon, work crews were
preparing to load, starting late
tonight, more than 500,1nl gallons of
volatile liquid hydrogen and liquid
oxygen fuels to drive the shuttle's
three main engines.
Young and Crippen flew here
yesterday to meet with project officials and . to make final
preparations for a mission that Is
one of the most inoportant in the U.S.
man-in-space program. This
nation's future in space - scientifically, commercially and
militarily - is riding op this launching of the world's first reflyable
spacecraft.
.
It is strictly a test flight, with
Young and Crippen slated to exercise all of Colwnbia's complex parts
- its flight controls, cargo doors,
engines, computers, fuel and life
support systems, and it.'l ability to
land back on a runway like an
ait llner.
They are to orbit the Earth 36
times in 54* hours. Btit this is the
first time a spaceahip has been flown
by men without first being launched
wunanned.

General Bradley dies

.aeapr.g tonight. Lows in the mld-408. Partly cloudy Friday with a
chance of lhowel'll in the afternoon. Highs 6$-70. Chance of rain 10 percent tonight and 30 percent Friday. Winds northerly leaa than 10 mph

NEW YORK (AP) ~ Gen. Omar
Bradley, the last of the natim'a
great World War D commanders
and the last of its fiVHiar generala,
has died at the qe of •·
Bradley, a lanky, beapectacled
MLuourian who commanded U.S. ill-

'

.· ExetidedOIIIoForeeut-SaturdaythroughMmday:CID!ICIYSlturday. A cblllce of ahowen or thunderstorms Sunday and Monday.
Hlcbl in the mld-401 to mid-'1011 Saturday and in the 7011 Sunday and
Monday. Lon in the 4011 sBturday and mlcJ.40a to
Sunday and

nud-601

e.

~

lilt -011

CLEVELAND - Those historic seconds when shots were fired at
President Reagan, WIJWlding the president and three others, shall
remain vivid in the memory of AHred Antenucci, the man who first
pulled the accused gunman to the ground.
In an emtlonal homecoming Wednesday at Cleveland Hopkins International Airport, the 88-year-old president of Carpenters Unlon
Local1750 in Cleveland met reporters, family and friends.
AI lis voice cracked and tears welled In hi8 eyes, he made his first
public comments about those terrifying seconds.

MW!IIay.

1

• Thrusters Tested
• Adjust Data Processing Systems
1 Payload Dools Closed 101
Tests &amp; Opened

\,

------

Witness recalls shooting

tGnlght.

• Medical Comml.f1ieahons

·••
Externll T1nk
JeHlaonld

JeHIIIOMd

,.......

•Fight &amp; Reaction Conlrots Tested

..

Roc:ktl Bootllt'

nesdiy.

(Because BANK ONE has jus·t
ieduced the interest rate
on neW·car loans.)

"'u

2

..........
•"
''.
'
Solid Fuel

ceptable, would end their 14-school day walkout.
Striiing teachers in Youngstown awaited word on the latest round of
talka, meanwhile, while Striking Instructors in Mariemont atte~ed
the Cincinnati Reds opening baseball game.
The Raverma walkout lost SOI'I)e steam this week, as about 35
teachers left the ranks of the Ravenna Education Association to return
to the claasroorn. About 107 of 224 instructors sliU were striking Wed.

I

P1ylold Ooor1 Tt~led .
S. On-"...lt a-tiona ·.

3

I
1

COLUMBUS, Ohio- 1be state's overall crime rate for 1980 jwnped
6.1 percent from the previous year, including a 9.1 percent hike in
viole!)l crimes, says Attorney General William J. Brown.
The overall increase represented a slight decDne, however, when
compared to the 8.6 percent rise from 1978 to 1979.
Cleveland had the highest nwnber of murders reported, accounting
for 265 of the state's 852 homicides in 1980. The figure actually
representeda3.3 percent decline, however, from1979.
Akrun reported 25 homicides, up 31.6 percent, and Colwnbus had 1r1
murders, up26.1 percent.

.

--

vulm forces on D-Day at Normandy and Wll the fil'llt to chair the
Join&amp; Cblefl ci Stalf,lllffered a heart
attack Wednelday while attending a
dinner at the 21 Club here and l'llll
prunounced dead shortly afterward
ala holpltal.
·
Durin&amp; hill119 yeart1 ol active duty,
the lqetlt aervlce of anyone in U.S.
blslory, he commanded the largest
force in U.S. history - 1.3 mllllm
men in World War D - and never
lost a fight,
But, he once told a congreillonal
committee, "u far u I am concerned, nr I~ Ia Immoral."
Secretary of tbe Army John 0.
Manh Jr. called llrlldley "a great
· pUiGt, 1 peerlMa military leader
and 111 IDdlvldual dedlcat.d to the
caUII ol peiCiin tlie lllll'id. ••
''With hill pi"'. ., tbe ll'lllf IIIII
our lllticln nlalt Gill ollbe 111011
llfioCid IIIII lllflea men to mr
-lite-"..,._~ "llldAr·--•
I w,
my OtW aiSWIGC E. C. MeJw.
. '1111 PaUp llld llntdley woold
be burlld In .vu,.tan N.u-1

tw ¢1r7 IIIII*II.WIIItbtPia. D.C.
~~nc~~ey, w11o w ..- to New.

'

NIW ~ Nft llntal11111 . . . . - N' , , pill
llll.._., .......... c.Qc.t.r l'r 'Wdit ... U.IJL .... I

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I

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' evfl-v~•·---~~

UMW District 6 President Ed Bell
said he w8llll't surpriaed by the fight.
District 6 represents 15,1nl miners in
southeast Ohio and the West
Virginia panhandle.
"I think they are pretty upset by
the layoffs," he said. "I feel to Jay
off the head of the safety department
and his staff is pretty important to
the miners still working out West."
" It (fighting ) should never happen," said Charles Greer, president
of Local 1890 in Langsville. "But
anything that goes on up there
doesn't surprise me.''

FLIGHT OF THE COLUMBIA----------"'"'

Free Decor a tin~ Consultant

' . ·•·A labOr COillultant for atriking·ljavenna teachers says the group
plans to meet today to consider a contract p!'(lpOI!8! which, If a!l-

Member FDIC

tile wlion,'' he said.

The fight apparently stenuned
from a letter in which Acord
criticized 133 strike-prompted layoffs at UMW headquarters. Acord was
among 133 workers laid off as of
Aprill5.
" I tried to hold my own," Acord
·said. "But he's a lot ... bigger than I
am. I had to laugh about it later, it
was so funny , We were ~o old
chickens in a barnyard."
The fight ended with an hour-long
dil!cusslon, but the differences were
not resolved, Acord said. "I can no
longer support him as president of

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, April9, 1981

Contract would end long strike

••

~rs will stand for it."

•

at y

Vol.2f,No. 149
Coprrlphted 1911

Prepasted wallpaper eliminates the messy job of
spreading paste and is so easy to hang. ·.

'

f

e

e

WALLCOVERINGS
.

"It kind of took me by shock," said
H.R. Hall, head of UMW Locall340
in New Lelington. "The strong-ann
days are over with. I don't think the

•

State's crime rate increases

LILIES - MUMS f
AZALEAS - CORSAGES f

P•meroy ,

Name left out

"t

For the next two months*, when you purchase ·a
new car from any Meigs County area automobile
dealership, we'll reduce the interest rate on any
approved new car loan. And that helps reduce
your overall cost of transp9rtation. So if you're
thinking of buying a new car, make your best
deal at any Meigs County area dealership and
ask about this special. program from BANK O~E.

f PERMAIIENT MEMOfiiAI. FUMERS '
f . POMEROY
t
f FLOWER SHOP
f

'

(9-11 a.m. only), April13; !thruMTuesday (9-11 a.m. o'!ly), April14 ; N
thru R - Wednesday (9-lla.m. and
1-3 p.m.), Apri115; S thru T- Thursday (~11 a.m.), Apri116;.Wthru Y
- Friday (9-lla.m. only), April17.
Those who cannot make the appointed days are to visit the department on May 8 from 9 till 11 a.m
only.

process miners' appDcati~ f&lt;r
food lllampl. Betty MIUer, d!JeCtor
of the department, expects
processing of applications bY the
agency's 43 workers to take aboli
two weeks.
The main attention Wednesday,
however, wu fOCIIIed on Cburch, a
200-pound fonner miner, and hill fiatfight with Acord ootside wlion
headquarters in Washington, D.C.

~ cl8y of

COLUMBUS, Ohio- The state Department of Energy has asked the
Public Utilities Comml.!aion of Ohio to look into the shut-off of iJl.
dustry-owned natural gas wells by Colwnbia Gas Transmission Corp.
Energy Director Wayne Nichols said the industries had been using
Columbia transmission Jines under Ohio's self-help natural gas
program, which originated during the natural gas shortage in the mid19708.

f aJT FUMR ARRAHGEMEN'IS

Wt

schedule for Meigs

'

:

'

By The Alleelated Preu
struck March 27 wnen tne1r old pact rural road III!B1' an Ohio CQal and
a walkout by with the BituminOUB CQal Operators CollBtnlction Corp, site Tuesday.
United Mille ' Workers passed il~Soctation expired.
.·
without major IDcident in Qhlo
Despite a 381ncrwe in wagea and
A sheriff's cleputy said late Wed.
coaUielda, atrikens continued aver- · benefits under the proposed pact, · nesdaythedaypallledwithnoreporbal blclduh against their president, union niembers oppoee Its removal ted confllct.B between atrikep aiKI
Sam Cbufcb.
of $1.90 per ton royalties required by · non.UMW miners. But there were
companies for procesaing non-union reporja that inany trUcke~J for an ·
Iii the wake of a scuffle betweel\ coal over UMW tipples.
· Ohio Coal and Conatructlm mine.
Olurch and UMW Safety Director
were refualng to work, he ·Ald. The
Everett Acord on Tuesday, miners
Tempers cooled somewhat Wed- company Is non-UMW,
has ita
lncreued their grumbling over the nesday in Belmont County, mean- ownunions. ·
·
wlimleader, who already has been while, site of an alleged· attempt to
In a related development, officials
under fire for campaigning in favor block tlilcka hauling coal from non- of the Belmont Coullty Welfare
of a prOposed contract rejected by UMW .mines . . Roofing nalls were Department plan to litaff a building
the rank-and-file March 31. ~Y dwnped m a three-mile stretch.of a at the county fairgrounds Monday to
' .

AI

f

SPRING BLOSSOMS
FOR SOMEONE YOU LOVE

t

But the amendment applied only
to future tax collecUons without addressing IneqUities that already
have occumd.
"If you are going through a reappraisal right now, what it will do is

.

.

'

Seeks assiStance from PUCO

f

orronQem•nt, o r a lresh green plant

praisals.

slow down the increases and mate
them equal within clB""ell~" said
Rep. Benny Boolnno, [).Cleveland.
Under his bill, approved 71-22 by
the House on Tuellday, the base year
that county auditors use to calculate
tax reduction faCtors applied
through lsllue One would be at 1977
levels Instead of those in 1980. That
would yield a reduction of 5 percent
to 7 percent on the Ul81 t.U bills of
residential and !ann property
owners, Bonanno said.
•
"This action will not reduce one
dollar of tax revenue ... Oowing into
the local taxing districta," he said.
"The amount reduced from the
homeowners' tax bills will be added
to corrunercial and industrial
duplicates." .

\

.

~-----

Gw

property than Industrial ani! commercial land.
IsSue One, a constitutional amendment approved by voters In November, sought to protect homeowners
agaiMt unvoted tax increases due to
Inflation. The hikes appear in
periodic property value reap-

'

'

•

1Make Some Bunny Happy. I

I
I
I
I
I
I
·1
I

heavily on residential and fann

Church verbal backlash continues

ELBERFELD$

•

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Yart tnm IU ron Blili, ,._,
Plaall far lite cllaW ol lbe local
'q I al lbe A..,.;rtht of lbe
'UIIII ..t. Army, celllpl'd In ID
I af lbe 11 Qub, laid IInce

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atllm • W.W •• U, . . • - C3le llllll'a Ill&amp; 11ft 1111r
I ill, ... We'l ••r lu New Ytdl CU, llllpllll. Be W8 a CAP
JIIW)LEY DIES -

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