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.WINTHROP

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at y

en tine
2 Sections, 12 Page•
15 Cents
.A Mullimedla Inc. Newspoper

. Pomeroy..;.:Middleport, Ohio, Monday, Apri113, 1981

Lightning
triggers
explosion
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WHAT D0~5 IT LCOK

OR A_CI&lt;ONDQFHAPPY CHIL.DFtiN,
LAL.kSHINq AT iHc ,ANTICS OFA
11
II PUNCH ANDJU!7Y ~HOW.

Lll&lt;e TOYOUi

m ME, It' LOOI&lt;e LIKE

A RAfN c;:.L.OWD.

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A labora!Oey building owned by the structure thls morning and
the American Electric Power Co., · damages could not be accurately
Wl8 heavily damaged Sunday af.
estimated. However, one unofficial
ternoon near the Philip Sporn Plant estimate said that losses could
•.at Graham Station, W. Va.
easily run $100,000.
Fire lllld ep~ergency equlpme~~t
Kathy Short, a dauglier of Mr.
from the area nished to the scene and Mra. 'l'h9mas Kaylerwho Uve In
' when It WliS reported that an ex· property adjacent to the laboratory
. ploeioo had 'aecurred at the power buil~, was in the yard of l!er
' plant.
parent&amp; home when the explosion oc-·
A spoltelnan said that lightning currecl. She told '!'he Dallf Sentinel
' · had llllPI""Uy struck a l'\11'11 power she was IOoklug in the dfrectlon of
Une callllilg feedbaCk to lnm- the building when she ' heard a
slormera near the laboratory tremendoua blast "Uke a:bomb ex·
·' building. All three transfonnera plodlng". She then saw a-ban of fire
were damaged and it was not known rising from the area of the tranthis morning If one of the Iran- sfonners and ~ was followed by
-. sf01 mera or all Ill them had ex· heavy clouds of yellowish smoke,
· · ploded. When the exploalloo tOok Mra. Short said.
place oU wu apewn onto the roof of · Tbe Kaylor family called the fire ·
. the laboratory building catching the •department. Equipment 'from New
roof of the cemcrete block struCture Haven, Mllaon. Cottageville, the
oo fire. The 1roof eventually collap- Mountaineer Plant, Pomeroy and
. Slid lirto the building which housed Middleport rushed to
scene.
• nwnel'OUB records plus a wide There was a IDII8S of eqwpment and
variety of testing equipment and numerous fire fighters at the scene.
materials and Office equipment, There could have been ' additional
There were no workers on the job in uniiB but the complete Ust of all
· the building Sunday afternoon. The depar1ments at the scene was not
roof wu on top of the equipment in available this morning.

pte

T1-IE

WAimESS ~GHT
OUR FOOl'. 5HE SAID.
"THERE 'TOU GO."
· I HATe THAT:'

EVEt-J THE

(,ASHIER So\ID
IT WHEN 'SHE
GAVE ME MY

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BECOMING A SOCIETY
OF PU51-10VERS F0&lt;
EVERYTHING .'

WE NEVER -·
SPE.AJ&lt;. OJ r-'

WELL. I'M

$1Ck OF IT.'
•

M GOING

SACK IN THERE
ANI:' TELL THSM

JU?T HOW I FEE.L -'

· THERE

,

"rrU. GO.'
.

-IIM~ boung champioo Joe
Louis, who held the title for 12 yean
and ranked BB one of history's
~test

flghtera, died Sunday. He

waaM .

Called the Brown lkmber for his

puncJi IIIII

string of knockout vic-

tories, ~ wu jut 23 when he
we.~ the title by 'knocking out 31·
yeaMid James J.Braddock in
eighth round at Chicago in 1937.
He had a
record, lncludlng 31
knockoutll, at the tlrhe he fll'St woo
the heavyweight title.
In 17 years BB a boxer - alm•ost
four yean of that time was spent in
the Anny during World War D - he
earned nearly $5 mllliDII. He had llttie to show for It when he was
through ·and was in conatant dif·
flculty with the gOveriunent oo in·

By '1be Allodated Preu
United Mine Workers officials say
coal operators must give in on three
key IMues when they return to the
bargaining table Tuelday If they ex·
peel WJ!on miners to go ~ong with
any new contract pn&gt;p~Mals.
Nwnber one, says the president of
O!arleston, W.Va.,. based District
17, is reiMbltement of the $1.90

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CDI1ie taxes.

JOELOUJII

Soviet vessel in recovery area ·
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - ASoviet filhlng trawler lkillked about
the Atlantic Ocean where two American recota)' ships were waiting
to retrieve the 1'\!UIIble 110Ud rocket boosters jelliloned by ~shut­

OOWMBUS,'Ohlo - The Ohio Department of Nllurll a.ource.
•11lt'a reached 11118ft&amp;11&amp;11 with Ohio lnnllnc. that endl the~
JIIIIT• operatloo of the Jodce IIJld cabin faciltlel at Punderlllll State

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Police stage 'sick out'
srow, Ohio- Pvlk:e ui this Aknln IUburb have been caJIIng in lllct.

IPJIII'IIIIb' ..._of lack of pi oga •In contract !alb.

Patrolmen, nwnbn of the Fraternill Order
-~ calllni In lllcll Saturday.

or Police I.Aldge 82,
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Nil*...,... betwNilbe FOP and Stow city offtclall were pl•nned
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. 8tlllr I It fbi la'll beal Ubct to file ..... at the pollee'llaUoo,
wbn Qlllf Dlrrll1 Wlllllf, Lt. RGD
Lt. Fred Lone and
l'llrcllm6D Pbll Llrle !lave been Oil duty.

a.,..,._,

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.Weather -

t ••• ..d thu i

1huw

Regan called the one-year tax cut
"less than half a loaf."
David A. Stockman, the ad·
· ministration's budget director, said
the difference between the Jones
budget and the administration plan
was "not in the realm of compromise (but) in the realm of fun.
damental difference." Stockman
predicted earlier that Reagan would
veto a one-year tax cut, although the
president's position has been that he
will not decide to veto IIO!llething
before it has cleared Congress.
Stockman said last week that he
believed Republicans in the House
would get enough support from conservative Democrats to pass the
Reagan budget and that the
measure also would pass in the
RepubUcaCH:ontrolled Senate.

~alty

on non-union coal processed

by UMW companies.

/The Bitwninous Coal Operators
A.tsoclation aliiO must agree to
strengthen the langllage dealing
with mine leasing and drop a ~Y
pfobatlonary period for new emPloyees, Jack Perry said.
Unless the BCOA's chief
~lor, B.R. Brown, makes

those changes, Perry said, reswning
bargaining "w!U be an exercise in
futility."
"Meeting and negotiating are two
differeht · things," Perry said.
"There might be exchange, but
whether it's fruitful or not would be
another matter. The proposal sent
down was rejected in a fashion that
indicates changes need to be made."

The renewed talks, which will be
held in Washington, will represent
the first progress in resolving the
strike since March 31, when rank:
and-file miners voted down the first
proposed contract by a 2-1 margin.
Brown said over the weekend that
be had agreed to go back to the
bargaining table after UMW
~Ciln'tinu•edon page 6)

cAPE CANAVERAl,. Ilia. (AP)The utronauta of Columbia, their
rocll:ellhip
along lib a
"ciliJnp," tesled COlliN l)st.ftuj
today for Tllelday'neer1Jl8 ~
after 80UI"cei llld pbulogai!pbi illdlcated the UDdli1Jell.y heat lbleld crucial. to survival - II •pparently

honnaJ lllld Crippen said, "we got
r.bout ready to break out the loog unjlles," Shuttle Control quickly
resolved that by dwnplr)c water out
Ill a heat exchanger.
The 111111. "The fllghl of the Shuttie Colmnbla," wanned their !!pirits.
It said, in part, "Many, many hours
inllcl ,
; · went Into this thing. A job well done
On Flight O.y Two; "em-ytb1Dg'1 by lbe lhuWupace team."
worii:IJJC JUII fine," a ml.uiGD dlreCo Following breall:fut, Crippen and
tor llld today. '"lbere's notlllrig YOUDC plunced into a day of ex·
remotelY-- a problem." I tenslve testing of spaceship systems
Jol)n YOWII and Robert Crippen · - worll:lng weU except for minor
were a~ frlim a cbiDJ ~·-• "anomillell." A remarkeably clear
sleep In orbit by a ~ telecul lbowed Young testing the
tune that celtbratad thllr •. __ lhlp'lfllgbtcontroll.
machine.'' Tbly blpn tAIItiDI
Cobimbla b the dnmalk: landlna
''Tile veblcle II parfDI'IIIInc JUII
that will conclude tile . . . tbll beautifully, much batter than
tlnlt .the .Uatt.d Stata ladl Into ~ 1'111' apec:ted Ill tjle ftnt
lbeJpJCerace.
lliCM." Yoq llidSunday.
CaiJin ........ ~
"It'• paf'llmlic ua • cbamp,"
.... In
below Crlppall repGI'tad.

..wna

'l1lt Manor H0111elodge at tbe part bu been c!ONd tor re.vation
IIIDce Nonmber It'll. Ohio Inna will be respclllible for refurnlsblrie
till MIDor Bodle and the clepartnJd will mike addltioal Jmr. .
poyemeots to lllcreaM safety.
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Clllo Inns will tultlnae to operate lodges at Hueaton Wood&amp;, Burr ·
Olt, Silt Forli, and Shiwoee atate parb.

fQr todlf.

e Jones did not say who bar·
that feeling, similar sents have been ell)lressed by
corlgresslonal Democrats. The
Republlcan·dominated Senate

Budget Committee rejected
Reagan's overall program last week
after calculating that it would fall
far short of the president's pledge of
a balanced budget in 1984.
Jones' Cllnunittee endorsed a
Democratic budget alternative last
week, saying it would balance the
budget in 1983, would spend more on
social programs and less on defense
and would leave a $25.6 billion deficit
in the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1 instead of the $45 billion forecast by
the administration.
The tax-writing House Ways and
Means Corrunittee then unveiled a
one-year tax cut of $40 billion as an
alternative to the $54 billion called
for in the first year of the administration's three-year plan.
Administration spokesmen scof·
fed at the Democratic plans.
Treasury Secretary Donald T.

Astronauts test
_c ontrol ·- systems

.ODNR reaches agteelnent

"SO I HELD YOU UP JUST ~AST MONTI11 REMEMBER, ....,...~
·THESE ARE INFLATIONARY TIMES:
MAC!"
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we do it, we ought to come to grilll
with the spending side, and we ought
to force Congres and the administration to cut spending ilefore
we have large tax cuts."
Such a statement of intention,
Jones said on the CBS program
'' Fa~ Nation," would be binding
oo
gress and the administration
only
ug~ "political pressure."
~o S81d he believed the ad·
tion is willing to comp · because "there is a growing
,f · that i1 you have a three-year,
30 rcent cut ilf'taxes that you're
leaving yourseU wide open to a.very
jarg~ deficit the third year out."

-!"l"

tle Columbia. ·
JUII40 minutes before launch Sunday, the trawler wu lntereepted
by a U.S. CoB8t Guard slip and eacorled out of the Impact area,l&amp;ld a
.spokeswoman for United TecllnoiO!lie~, boo1ter ~ contractor
for the National Aeronautics and Space Admin11traUon.

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UMW negotiators believe (.)perators
must concede at least three issues

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burning roof fire. The structure collapsed trapping a considerable
amoWJt of office equipment, records and testing equipment. The building
is owned by the American Electric Co.

President, Democrats to compromise
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Reagan administration may trade
its proposed three-year tax cut for a
one-year plan and IJI'OIDiBes of more,
says the chief budget writer in the
Democratlcxilntrolled House.
Administration officjals "indicate
they are wiJilng to COJnpi'IIJlliae oo
both the spending cut side and the
-tax cut sidet Rep. James Jones, !).
Okla., chauman of the House
Budget Committee, said Sunday.
It WB8 the first indication tl!at the
~ti~ is ready to comprGnll8e on Its propoaed 30 percent
cut in individual income tax over
three yeara.
Admitting that he had no "official
statements" from the ad•
mlriistratlon, Jones said, "What I
would propose is that we state poUC'
clearly In Congress that we want ,o
have a mu!Uyear tax bill. But before

CHANGE.'

LAS VEGAS, Nev. ·- Fmm.-

MY FOOT.' WE

HEAVILY. OAJrW}EI&gt; .~ A fire triggered by lightning cauaed an
estimated $100,000 darriage Sundiy afternoon to a laboratory building
near the Philip Sporn Plant in the Graham Station area of Mason County.
AIII8BII of fire fighting and emergency equipment was on hand to fight a
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"""'v......,. LDIJ Ia till mid io · - ·

thalli,.,..--

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Extends time 011, re.trainiDg order

,.._c::loladJWIIIta ' ll,ollllaTa:...,.IIIPinthelolrto~ ·

... ""'"of nln ,..,... ........ "I'VE SEEN YOU DO BETTER THAN
THAT, ETHEL. WITH OUR CAR!"

• llwrly lNIJJIIIb"'dtt"

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....-

Tuelday. Wlndl

'l'lle COia't ... I 4 t1hl I
IDIIIIII b I pa !'eJ!• I'J lli,JIIk.Uon

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tar !hJJL. Aprl117•

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�.. Commentary

Plge-2 ~Tht Dlily Siiifliill
•Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
MondiY, April 13,1911
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·:Carnival time in Dartmouth_·_________:_____;Wi:;..:::;-w;:.::;u:.:.:.:.m~F•
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A's post fourth win in row

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...;.....Buc_
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· · A aeu&lt;JO or two beck Dartmouth
· ·College waa ln the news when two or
three studenta II! a moment of ~ ·
. • exuberance skated IICl'OIIII the ice
: between period&amp; wearing lndlan
· feathers and whooping a war cry.
The crowd loved It, the lndlan
having, of coune, been the totemic
symbol of Dartmouth for a couple of
hWldred years. The authorities, on
the other band, all but assembled the
Nuremburg Tribwl81 tQ try the
sludenla for genocide. If you have
• lost the point, It Is this: that the per'• petuation of the Indian symbol Is
deemed by offidal Dartmouth as of·
fQive tQ an ethnic minority. Since
• no allllllllus of Dartmouth .hlis been
• known to have harbored an unfriendly thought against Indians since Sitting Bull's exceases at Little
' Big Hom faded from memory, the

wondte

alwnni began tQ fldg~
whether the adminlatratlonat • •
mouth bad adopted fresh and . ndy
totemic symbols of their owrl far
more mlschievous thin the inn«kent
Indian bead.
Enter a Californian allllllllllll• Dr.
Jolm Steel,. who .announced himself
u a candidate for trustte .bn a
petition ballot. 1be administration
hurled ita conaiderable res011rce11
againSt Steel. But be won ln a wallt
and survived a proce4ural
challenge. Dr. Steel came ln~ter­
mlned that Dartmouth shoul not
succumb to modernist tre
of
which exlimples abound In most
progressive institution&amp; of ~her
learning, where tradition an~piety
are scorned, injustices social lzed,
the state glorified, patri tism

The Daily Sentinel
Ul Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
11&amp;-992-ZlSi
DEVOTED TO lliE INTEREST OF TilE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lh

Bm~
~v

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rT"'1.......I L-.--r"l r-T""E!d·~

ROBERT L. WINGETI
rubll5her
!

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

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Auis&amp;allt Publi!her!Colltroller

Gtmtral Ma111grr

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nt'w~

patronized.
gradUites In their late . . 'wbo baft
Meanwhile, the undergraduates aleady ~ tlle~J-.1- In
had become restl\&gt;e, Most colleges ·~ mpecttn 6e1ds, IRROIIOO!d
are deeply Influenced by the presen- · that they too would .nm for trwitee.
ce of forceful men concerned with · The conservailve weekly uDclertook.
public 1.asuea and willing to give to ln!e11'1ew the two candidate. ln
studenta their time. Moatly, In the order to a* tbem queatlons lbolt
Iaat period, such
bave theiredueaUonalpbiiOIIOphy.
been active on the civil rights front,
Now It Is widely known but aeldom
In denouncing the Vietnam War, enunciated that college trustees are
nuclear . energy, McCarthyism, suppoiedtoattendmeetlngs,purras
whatever. At Dartmouth, Professor orchestrated by the president, then
Jeffrey Hart not only teaches
.
·
profound and popular courses In ~W~~.~~.,.~ ·
English, he is ub[tultous, · \J-;MIWIJ
challenging the inodemist icons,
writing bookli, a SYDdlcated column,
and making himBelf avallable to any
Dartmouth student · who wanta
academic or political advice and encouragement. His presence has
catalyzed an entire generation of
Dartmouth students whose turn to
the right anticipated the republic's
last November. Recently, these
studenta founded their own weekly
newspaper, which Is a vibrant,
joyful, provocative challenge to the
regnant but brittle liberalism for
which American colleges are
renowned (e.g., the Princeton
faculty, which in 1m voted overwhelmingly for McGovern, ·giving
Richard Nixon about the same nwnber of votes as Dick Gregory). The
administration foollsbly attempted
to deprive the journe) of the right to
use "Dartmouth" on ita logo, such
was ita desperation.
But there was more on the horizon.
A few ~Weks ago, . two young

rnesaors

110 billie and ra1ae JDGiley. Tbe admiDistraUon, ieamb111 that two
actually propo.ed to a~ the
alwnni of Dlrtn!outh what their
views re on educational policy, had
:yet 8JI!Ither legal fit, advising the
candidates that any such ventilation
o1. their views woulcl di.lquallfy them
under the bylaws. A lawyer for the
dillldents replied, 1n a · rather
energetic letter, that . the adminiBtraUon ahould acquaint llself

"*"

wlih the Firat

AmelldiiMnt 10 the
COIIIIItutlon before see1dnll ID deny
to Dartmouth alumDI the right to advise . other Dartmouth alwnni of
their views, the better to Inform
them'lbewbomballotsto~!or out In due
ww

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· courae, .00 It II just JIOIIible tblt
'Dartmouth will do for the IICidemlc
world what Reagan bas done for the
political world. And incidentally
-avengepoorGenera!Custer. .

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WARMING TO TilE TASK- Cleveland IDdlan Rick Manning warms
his bauds with a bot water bottle u be stands In tbe on deck circle during
a cold game with lbe Milwaukee Brewen Stllldly In Cleveland. Even bot
water bottles couldn't warm up the Indian bats u tbey lost to the Brewen
H (AP Laserpboto). ·

Editor

Liberal members open uphill battle

A MEMBER of Thr An oclatN Prrn. ln1arxl Dally Pn•u AU!K'latlon and thl'
..\mrriun Ntwt papt!r Publbhr rs As!W(iatlon.
LETTERS OF OPINION trt&gt; Wt!lcomt!d. Tht!)' ~ hnuld IJto lt$S than 300 words lonw. All
lt'Utnl Itt' Mubjert lu ~ilirtM aud mu5t bt' llil(nt'd " 'llh nHillr, Hddrm and trl~phorw
numbtor . Nn unti iMnt&gt;d lrttt'l'!l ..-·mJw pubiiMhed. IA"ttrr,.; shnu ld bt• ln I(nod ta ~ te , addrt's8ltq!
I!~-'4Ut'!l. nul pt'l14nrwlitlt·s.

Why does it
happen here?
. Consider this l!trilting disparity: Although this country's presidenta have
become frequen~targeta for assassins, the same fate has not befallen gover·
nment leaden in the world's other Industrialized nations.
There i,!, to be sure, a pattern of coups, insurrections and assassinations
whose object Is to topple the reigning authorities in various Third World
countries, especially in Asia, Africa and Latin America.
, • . TOOse violent acts, however, ususlly have a well-defined political or
ideological purpose - to take control of the government - while
· assassinations in this country Invariably have been conunitted by
emotionally disturbed individuals.
But why are the recurring efforts of deranged "lonen" to shoot our
president not matched by similar attempta to aS!U"•sinate Britain's prime
minister, France's premier, Gennany's chancellor, Japan's emperor or
Spain's king?

WASHINGTON (AP) - Liberal
House and Senate members are
opening what they concede is an
uphill battle to keep alive key
elementa of the ~965 Voting Righta
Act, a major component of the
federal government's civil rights
machinery.
Previous proposals to• refine
methods of ensuring that minorities
have equal access tQ the poiJs have
cleared Congress with relative ease.
But this year, a bipartisan group
of supporters are confronted with a.
new conservative political climate
on Capitol Hill and the opposition of
Sen. Strom Thurmond, the
Republican chairman of the Senate

Judlclsry Committee.
toughen existing enforcement
Along tQugh fight Is likely over the powers ln the 1965 law arid Ita
next 15 months, especially In the . subequent amenclmenta In 1970 and'
Senate, according to various 19'15. The law now Is acheduled to excongreasional sources.
pin! ln Augult 1912. .Kennedy,
Mathias and Rodino want to extend
"We know it will be difficult, It tQ 11192 to make l1ire It coven the
especially since tnly about one third. 1~cenaus.
The touchleat Issue· Is a
of the Senate Will around during the
civil fillhtl tlebates of the 1980s and req~Jirer!lent !bat nine states and
71M," · st'=dsenior Senate aide parts of 80IIIe otben seek Justice
Department approval whenever
whoreq
anonymity.
.
Sena.
M. Kennedy, 1). they change the rules for voting In
atate or federal electlona.
Massm· Charles , McC. Mathias local,
Thunnond, wbo Is from South
Jr., R- d., 1and Rep. Peter Rodino,
D-N.J., chjUnnan of the House Carvllna, "believes that more than
Judi · · cbmmittee, planned to an- enough time bas passed to make It
nounce I-U011 today to retain oi no 10118er necessary to punllb

states," according to an aide.
South Carvllna Is IIIJIOI1g the siates
now required to IJ(OVe to the Justice
Department that they 81'11 ilcit
seeilng to deprive blacka and other
minorities 'of their rigbt to vote.

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The others are Alabama, .
Mlsslasippl, I..Dulalana, Gecqla,
VIrginia, Texas, New MeDco and
ArlzOIIa.
In addition, parta of Maine, Idaho,
Florida, Callfornla, New Yort, •

Colorado, Michigan, Wyoming, '
South ·Dakota, Oklahoma and
Hawaii, a1ao are IIIOIIitored by the
Justice Department.

Opportunity will change insurance industry
NEW YORK (AP) - Tbe life insurance industry has a problem, but
as the more upbeat am0118 Ita members view It, they really have an.opportunlty. And that opportunity II
likely to change life insurance u we

into the future.
For lnauren, the problem

prevents them from lowering

arlies

from the statutory requirement that,
If asked, they must lend to
pollcybolden much of the cash
value of '!!bole life policies at rates
tbatstilldon't exceedS percent.
Aa a result, the Insurers say, tens
of bUllona of dollara m tied up at
below-market rates, with much of

preml1D111 falter than they hive
been.

(Tbe Industry uya that life Jn.
today CQita much !era than
It ured to. In 18t5, It IIJI, a -.yearold man paid f46 for tt,OOO ol. whole
lite, caqiual with about t2Jnow).
Unllb their~ amq
uvinp banD and IIYjDp and loan
asocialbw, IOIIlt llwaa&amp;i lee the
sl~tklllllllltc. Tbey bave I plan,
!hey ray, that lilly be In i*able to

1081111 1aat year, describes a twopoint program' to remedy tbe
problem.
Firat, policies will be rolled over.
According to Clark, lnauren wW Of·
fer their clients new policler In a·
cblnge for tiiOie containing the
single-digit loan proyillona. AI an Inducement, the new.pollcler wW be
more attractive in other waya- be
Wtth less attractive 10111 rata.

denlea

They all sniff mace-----'lArtii..L..UijBucllsiUn-wiU..."'

•

••

Today II Monday, Apri113, the lOird day ol.lllll. '!'bert 81'11 112 daya )eft
In the year.
Today'ahlgh!IIJht In liltory:
OnApri113, 170, the al!thor of the Decllratilnoflndepenclenceandthe
third pnlident ol.the United Stiltes - 11lomu JelfeiiOII - boni In
Albermarle CountJ, VIrginia.
•Ontbladafe:
1'
· . •
Ia 1M, KiJ11 Beary IV ol. Praacle llped lbe tcllet ol. NaMea,lf8JIIInla
larp IIIIIIW't ol. re'ilk"" llbert;JIO tilt PI iWIIIIJiuluatL
In 1'1'18, Gen. Otal'lf Wuhl. . . arrmd In New YariiiD pr~~~~trttbe
" cltTI defeRIIln lbe Rt9alutionllrJWII'.
.
In 1181, the United Nail• Gennl Alrmbly CCIII(Iernned ..,.rtbeid.
J
·~

.

~~~ -

lf5, Ctlt·

Slfi ·•• I
!

I 7HIN'C I
('#(..

•

Hefty Parker
beats Expos
By Assoclated Press
Ever since he reported to training
carrip this spring at more than 250
pounds this year, Dave Parker's
weight has been a hefty Issue.
But if he continues to hit the way
he did Sunday, his batting average
will be a lot fatter than his waistline.
"Dave Parker is swinging the bal
and running like the Dave Parker in
the MVP year he had," Pittsburgh
Manager Chuck Tanner said after
his full-bodied outfielder smashed
three hits, including a home run,
that helpe4 the Pirates beat the
Montreal Expos 3-2.
"I've never thought a thing about
his weight," added Tanner. "All I
want him to do is be healthy. People
make big Issues out of things, but
Dave is a big man. He's S-feet-,5, and
Dave plays bard and he plays every
day."
Parker weighed about 22:) pounds
when he won the National League's
Most Valuable Player award in 1978.
But after knee surgery during the
past off·season, he reported to the
Pirates' camp at an acknowledged
weight of 255 pounds.
Near the closo! of spring training,
Chicago White Sox broadcaster Jimmy Piersall likened Parker to a
"haby hippo or a baby whale" anq
suggested be might weigh ~270
pounds.
Parker initially responded with,
"Let them look at my stata In Qc.
toller." But be was silent Sunday,
declining to talk to reporters.
In other NL games, the St. Louis
Cardinals defeated the Phlisdelphla
Phlllies 7~; the Atlanta Braves nipPed the Cincinnati Reds 3-2; the New
York Meta edged the Chicago Cuba
2-1; the Los Angeles Dodgen
, defeated the Houston Aatros 3-2 and
the San Francisco Gianta outlasted
the San Diego Padres 7~ In 14 innings.
Montreal rookie Tim Raines
belpi!!l the Expos take a 1.0 lead In
the fillst inning when be led off with a
iclple off Rick Rhoden and scored on
Andre Dawson's bloop single.
But Parker smacked Ray Burris'
first pitch of the fourth Inning over
the right field fence at Pltlsburgh's
'I'hree Rivers Stadium for his first
homer of the season and J85011
Tbompaon followed with his first

for from'Trevor Berbick, but the 1111beaten World Bo1lng Coun~ll
heavyweight champi011 beUeves It
will be of benefit to him When he
relurlll to the rlnc next lliOIIth.
"Thll did nie lood; It 11ot me
ready," aald Holmes, who will
defend hir crown againlt former
champl011 Leon Spil*l 011 May 22 at ,
a site to be determined. "I'U be able
. tQ pt off I Uttle euler with Leon.
He'a more tl. a boDr and a lot ._
awkward."
Holmel didn't bave mucll dll·
ftculty In winniiiC I _ , , . . Jt.
1'11111111 dlciiiCIII . .... ..

..,t.. .....

c .. ,... ....

Pltlllla

lnclw"'llik411W. .............
tQ p lbe cllltlnel.
' I

i

Royals 4, Orioles Z
Dennis Leonard retired the first 15

Baltimore batters before Issuing a
walk. He lost his no-hit bid when
Rich Dauer opened the seventh with

Milwaukee
Detroit
New York

L

Pel.

1.000
.667
.667

Baltimore

1

1

.5110

11011011

11

.5001

-

Yo

1

1

2

.133

2

.0002

I

0

GVW
182" WHEELBASE · FULL AIR • GOOD 9:00 X 20 TIRES
RECENTLY REMOVED FROM OUR MIXER FLEET WILL

-

homer In a Pltlsbw'gh uniform and Calitomia
3
1
.750
1
Chlcago
I
.5110 2
1
the Pirates were on their way.
Karas City
.5110 2
I
I
Rhoden got the victqry with late Teus
I
2
.133 21'.
I
3
.250
3
S..!Ue
relief help from Enrique Romo.
0
I
.000
I
Cardluals 7, Phlllles 3
S.blrdly'•Gamft
Milwaukee 5, CleYeland 3
Garry Templeton tripled home
OUi&amp;nd 3, Mlo.-.. 0
one run during a tJu-ee.rvn rally i,n
Detroit &amp;, Toronto 2
New York 5, Teus 1
the fifth inning and scored the winCalifornia 7, SeaWe 4
ning run on first baseman Pete
Only games scheduled
Sudly'a Gamet
Rose's errof, keying St. Louis'
Toronto 6, Detroit 2
triumph over Phlisdelphia.
Kanoa.! City I, Baltlnwre 2
Texas 6, New York 4
Winner Lary Sorensen, a~uired
Booton 5. Olicago I
by the Cardinals in a )Vinter trade
Milwaukee 6, Cleveland 1
Oakland l , ~ 0
from the ~waukee Brewers,
Calllomla 8, Suttle a
restricted the Phlllles to five hits ·
M-y'oG..,..
before giving way to Bruce Sutter in cyNe"
York (Jobn 1.0) at Toronto (Clan~I
the final three innings. Philadelphls
Balttmore
(Palmer 0.0) at Bost~;n
~)
right-bander Larry Christenson was (Crawfonl
Detroit (MorTis 1-&lt;l) at KaRSOI City
the chief victim of a 13-hit Cardinal (Sf/Uttorfl ~ 1. lnl
OUiand (Kln(lmon ~ I at Calllornla
attack, which included two Tem- (Zahn
1-0), ( n)
pleto!l triples.
Only lan&gt;ell IICI!oduled
n..IIJ's G.mes
Braves 3, Redl2
BaltimOre at Booton
Dale Murphy's RBI single in the
Milwaukee at Clticago
Cleveland at Texu, (n}
eighth inning capped a two-run rally
OUi&amp;nd at Calllomla, (n)
and led. Atlanta over Cincinnati.
M1nnelcU at Seattle, (n}
Only gameo ochoduled
Murphy's gam~wlnnlng hit came
after consecutive doubles by
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Claudell!Vashlngton and Glenn Hu~
EAST
W L Pct.GB
bard had tied the game 2-2 against New York
2
.ee7 I
.5110
I&gt;
losing reliever Tom Hume.
Mootreal
1
,:,00
l,i
Pltllb\irgh
The Reds had taken a 2-1 lead in Sl.looiJ
I
.100
I&gt;
the top of the eighth on an RBI single Otlcogo
I
333
I
1
.333
l
by Joe Nolan and Larry Biittner's Philadelphia
WEST
sacrifice fly off reliever Rick Camp. LooAntJeles
3 0 l.tltl!/ 2
I
.ee7
1
AUonll
"I've come up with a lot of guys on QnclnnaU
2 2 .5110 1Yo
2 2 .5110 1Yo
base In this series and bad chances Son Diego
2 2
to make all three games not very SonFrancloco
.5110 3" '
0
3
.tltl!/
HO!IItal •
close If I could have done a little
S.tarllly'• Gamel
Utl- 3, New YO!'l 1
more," said Murphy, wbo had bounMootnol at Plt11buQ)h, ppd., rain
l'hllldelphla I. III.Loula 2
ced out with the bases loaded earlier
• Son Fnncil&lt;o 2, Son Diego 0
in the game.
ClnclnnaU 3, Atlanll 2
Brav'll Manager Bobby cox said,
Lol Anlleltl 7, -,..o.-4 .
however, that Murphy "bad a lot of
Pltt.lbullh I, 2
Atlanla 3. Clndmati ' 2
chances to drive in runs in the series
III.LOoll 7, l'llllldolplia 3
- and he did drive In the big onea."
New YO!'l 2, Cll&lt;qo 1
Mets 2, Cube I
Lol Anaelel 3, z
8.1 Francllco 7, 8.1 Diego 8, 14 In·
Rookie Hubie Brooks opened the nlngJ
ninth with a triple and scored on
M_..T•Guaa
P I - (Candelaria ~l ot Phlla·
Mike Cubbage's pinch sacrifice fly &lt;lelphla
(Carlton ~) . (n)
to lift New York over Chicago.
Au.nta (NiekN ~) at HO!IItal (Knep~): (n)
Brooks' triple was his t1ilrd bit of the perClnclnnaU
!Beovor ~I at Son Diego
game and came off reliever and (Wioo ~1. ( n)
lA AnCels (Welch l).fJ J at Sn Franloeer Rawley Eastwick. Reliever claco
(Rlploy 0-0), (n)
Neil Allen, the fourth Meta' pitcher,
-,..Gomes
gained the victory.
Oticuo I I Tbe Meta bad taken a 1.0 lead In
SU.ooill 11 New Yon
Atlanla ot u - . (n)
the top of the eighth on an RBI single
Ont:UIIoti 11 Son Diooo, (n I
by Dave Kingman.
Lol Anlelel II Son f'l'llldlc:&lt;l, (nl

-

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3,500 EACH OR BEST OFFER

1

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Tuneup Special
Oil and Lube Special
• points • valwe ~llltf!r ' l
eoil •washer solvent
tulctt • plugt· • fuel
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Plul Ta•

NO OTHER
COUPOIS OR DISOOUNTS
ARE VALID ON
1lt£SE SPECIALS

VCUSWIGEN
Oillnd Lubt SptCIII
tubt • oil
filter e Wl$htr solvent.

aDO~•

Pliase ·lei! m.,....ar:e

SERIES ONE . .sineiS !"Cilley,

TO INSPECT CONTACT ELMER BAILEY, YARD FOREMAN
I

POMEROY CEMENT BLOCK COMPANY

NAM£

I
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VOLKSWAGEN

STATE
AUTOMOBILE
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INSURANCE
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MAKE EXCELLENT LOGGING OR DRILLING VEHICLES

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l)o • OU own or operate 11 ·
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mail the handy coupon.
DALE C. WARNEK
INSURANCE
101 w. Main 992·11~3 fo'om~y, 0.

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1-1967 REO CAB &amp; CHASSIS

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0
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I

Oakland

Insurance Package •

'

2
2
2

Torooto

r;;:;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;

Red Sol&amp;, Wblte Sol3
Jim Rice
capped a fiV&amp;-rUII eighth
Inning with a grand-sWn homer. AI·
ter Dotson gave up an infield hit by
Dwight Evans and a bloop single by
Tony Perez in jle seventh, the Red
Sox exploded an inning later with
tw~ out. ·Rick Miller then doubled
and scored on a single by Jerry
Remy.
Dotson was replaced by relief ace
Ed Framer but Dave Stapleton
singled, Evans walked and Rice hit
the next pitch for the second grand
slam of his career.
Blue Jays 8, Tlgen%
John Mayberry clouted a threerun homer in the sixth Inning to back
Leal's strong pitching-. The
Venezuelan right-hander blanked
Detroit until Lynn Jones' two-run
pinch homer in the eighth. Mayberry
connected off Detroit rookie Howard
Bailey, making his major league
debut, following Lloyd Moseby's in- .
field hit and a walk.
· Rangers6,YBDkees4
AI Oliver and Mickey Rivers
drilled two-run singles as Texas
came from behind to beat Ron
Guidry for the first time and give
Ferguson Jenkins the 2JiOth victory
of his career. Oliver delivered a
game-tying single in the fifth and

TWO TANDEM DRIVE HEAVY DUTY TRUCKS

MaJtr Leque Baa.et.U
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W

a ground-ball double inside third Rivers singled home the decisive
base. By that time, Kansas City bad runs In the seventh after Bump Willa
a 4-0 lead oti Clint Hurdle's two-run doubled home the gHbead liln.
homer and RBI singles by U.L. Jerry Mumphrey, BuckeY. Dent and
Nettles homered for the
Washington and Hal McRae.

FOR SALE

Holmes beats Berbick
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) - Larry
Holmes IIDI more than be bargained

defeated the .i'liw York Yankeei 6-4,
!be Mllwallliili Brewers trounced
the Clevelanlt-lndlana 1&gt;-1 arid the
California A!1leJ.t scored four-times
IIi the ninth t6 tum back the Seattle
r.farineril &amp;-e. . .
Mlnrtesota'(only hita off McCatty
were a checlli!tkwing grounder by
Glenn AdanlL.wlth two out In the
seventh lnnl4 which bounced off
McCatty's foOt and bloop singles by
Mickey Hatdler and Rob WU!ong.
Oakland got its run In the first when
Rickey Henderson led off with a
double off . Pete Redfern, was
sacrificed to lblrd and scored on a
slngle by Dav' Revering.
"No-hittera ·are a freak thing,"
said McCatty. "I look at it this way
- I just go out and try to win the
. ballgame. Anything else is extra.
Shoot, this Wl8 only the second
shutout of my life."
The four straight victories
represent the beat start since the A's
moved from Kansas City to Oakland
in 1968. The lour losses ties Min·
nesota's worst atart. The Twins were
0-4 in 1969 under ... Billy Martin.
"They're Impressive," Gory! said
of the Oakland starters. "I can't
remember four games like that. I'm
glad to see thein leave town."

For the
record. ..

'

Sablrda1allll4.11at

'I

By Aaaclated Prell
H the Oakland A's have' a bullpen,
it Is thb best-kept secret in baseball.
And [While other . rellef·happy
mana'ers have earned the sobriquet
of "C8ptaln Hook," 08kland's Billy
Martlli apparently wanta nothing to
do . with hil relief pltcben ...
whoever they are.
Steve McCatty fired 62-3 hitless innings Sunday and s!Qpped Minnesota on three soft singles as the
A's blanked the Twins 1.0 to complete a sweep of their fQUr-;game
seasorH&gt;pening series - all complete games by a staff which bad 94
route-going efforts a year ago, a
ml!dem major league record.
"You don't suppoee Billy's going
. for 162, do you?" Minnesota
Manager Johnny Gory! asked wryly
after seeing his club shut out for the
second day in a row, extending its
scoreless skein to 26 innings.' .
McCatty was just one of several
American League pitchers who fiir·
ted with no-hitters Sunday. Kansas
City's DenniB Leonard also didn't
allow a hit until the seventh inning
as the Royals downed the Baltimore
Orioles 4-2; Chicago's Richard Dotson went six before yielding a hit but
the Boston Red Sox rallied to down
the White Sox~ . and Toronto's Luis
I.eallost his bid after 52-31nnlngs as
the Blue Jays trimmed the Detroit
Tigers6:2.
Elsewhere, the Texas Rangers

Cleveland

Nobody bas a definitive answer to that troubling question, but here are
some theories worth considering:
First, the United States Is the world's leading example of a highly ad- know it.
vanced nation In which a single Individual wields the vast power and inThe problem - the opportunity fluence that come from serving simultaneously as both chief of state and Involves low-rost loana, something It
ceremonial head of government.
shares with another lnduatry, the
In almost all other developed countries, these roles are divided between home mortgage lenden. Each has -the 111011ey almply beliltl rdnvested
two people - a titulsr leader (often a monarch) and an elected head of state. made bUllons ol. dollars ol. loana 011 by borrowers in lllOIIey market
Thus, would-be assas•lns seeking to vent their frustrations with a gun are which they loee money every day.
mutual fwlda paying 11101'1! than 15
Secondly, the Industry II confldellt
torn between a queen and a prime minilter ln Great Britain, a president and
For rnor!llage lenders, such aa percent.
polic.'7bolden.
It will aucceed lil cbanglng lan·
a premier in France, an emperor and a prime minister In Japan.
savings banb and savings and loan
The inlifren d011't like lt. It forces
Wllllam Cark, pr erldlnt and chief p!'OVidlng for IDW-COIIIIoan rater. IIi
Not only Is authority consolidated In the United States, but the concept of association&amp;, the situation results them Ill 11e Ullquld. n
them · aecutlve ltflcer tl. ~cluetta the future, said Clark, the Industry
presidential omnipotence is reinforced by the nen medls's tendency to from having lent money at lingle- the chAnce to Invest ·at a much Mutual Life lnluraDce Co., wblcb. ·lilly be able to make loana at rater•
ascribe tQ that one man's actiON almost everything of importance that oc- digit interest rates for up to 30 years greater return. Tbey even cmtend It saw $270 m1W011 drallled Into polley 'tbatvary with the market.
cun in the executive branch of the federal government.
Finally, this country's popull5t tradition h8s been corrupted to produce a
self·lnduilent, clrcwt-like atmoephere of gawking, cheering and bandshaking that overwbebns the dignity of the office whenever the president·~
pean In public.
1be result: For those unatable Individuals who believe that the redress
Don't believe what you read about Alain llemlleimatMGMStudiOI.
Walter Matlhau said. "Lut weei very fancy store 011 Rodeo Drive.
of peraonll grievances as well u political power gJ'OW!I out of the barrel of a 'Hollywood. From the recent atbries
Hla secretary asked auaplciously, they let in a 11111 wltbout a· reaer"Can I belp. you?" a aa1esman
gun, there Is one -llld only one -logical target.
ln the newspapers and magazines, "Doyouhaveanappolntment?"
vationandhermillledtwolltuntllll!ll asked.
Another theory: This country's citizenry now-is e~terlng ita fourth everybojly In show buslneaa II Into
I said, "No/' llld abe~ a can rlghtlnfronttl.thesaladblr." ,
"I'm just looklrlll." Isald.
decade of being expoeed to television dramas whoee level of violence Is uncocaine. It's not true. They're Into out of her de* and gave me two
Jack 1.emm011 came over to the
He took out hil can of Mace and
malclled in any other nation.
Mace. For tholle wbo don't follow . squlrls ln the face. I bit the floor for . table anc1 I got up to shake banda was about to let me have lt.
Moreover, tholle television programs portray violence as painless- not self-defense, Mace Is a gas that can an hour and a half. When Benlbelm with him. Two private secretary
"Walt," I cried, "I hive a credit
only for the viewers but also for the victlma, who usually either Instantly paralyze an attacker for as long aa finally revived me, be apologized. guan1a jumped me fram behind and card."
diappear from the screen or reappear In a fully recovered state only three hours.
"I'm aorry," he said. "She's new on wrestled me to the floor.
minutes after being physically abused or aauulted with a lethal weapon.
To bear peopJe out in Los Anlleles the job. Sbe lr ~ to )Ill! a
."lt'r OK, boya, be'r a friend,"
He took the card llld aald, "It 1Ift.
Tbere Is, ln fact, alltriklng correlati011 between the rile In televillon's
tell It, Southern California II now karateblowtoyourneckflnt."
Jackaald. "Batlllcewartanyway." terbeiiOodoryou'aradead • ."
popularity and the increulng frequency of m•lnaUOI'II dlncted aplnst more dangerous than El Salvador,
BeaoDim ell:llled binrelf to c:aU • I left the rtore u 1ut u I· Clllllld
incwnbent presi&lt;lenta and candidates aeetlng electiOII to the White Houae.
and no one know! when be or she is • He took me to lunch ln the lllldlo hll'*- to lind out If~ . and weat beck ID the Bmrly,
.In the more than ?AlO years since the founding of the naUon, there have
going to beaauulted.
C01111111aaary.
.
"f!ll aafl, and tbellcame bact to the Willldre Hotel. Tbey wwe hold'Dia
been only 12 attempts, successful and unauccesaful, to shoot llll!ll In tboee
OnmyvialtthererecenUy,allthe
Tbeheldnlterukeduslfwehad table. "Marp Maced the srocet:f Maee e1aaa ln the~ and I
two categories - but exactly half of those lncldenta have occurred during table conversation bad to do with a reservalkln llld Bernbelm said, deUvery boy by J11i*ke IIIII bad to llped up for tbe -.111 ~~ 11oun
the put !I years.
burglar alarm systems, private "No, Iforaot to call."
takeblmtotheholpHal."
I bad my OWD 11ac:e Clll. I ftllt upFinally, there are thole damned guns. No other suPJ)OIIedly civlliud pollee services, but mostly Mace.
The beld niter :nriUtled twice,
"How many IQabtl!" Mattbaa · rllln IIIII Wilted pef JCIJ. At ftve
naU011 011 the face ol. the globe allDWB almost universal and virtually un1bere are hundreds of clru'!l and two Dobermln piDidlerr lelped aated.
the kDock came 1111bedoor. .
con\rolled handgun ownership within ita civilian population.
being held:Jll over tQwn ln the 111e of · out of the ldtchal and Wilt for our • "Two."
"Wboirlt?" laald.
Moreover, the ceaseless propaganda campaign waged by the~ the gas, and yau have tQ go to acbool ·· throllt.l. Fortwlately, Billy Wlldar,
"We alnya pve our grocery boy
"It'rme,bon8y,"mywlferald.
bear-anna proponenta provides not only a rationale for unsupervlaed traf· for 21&gt; hours be;fore you can be 1jcen- the dlrector, who ..,..u Gennan, tine," be laid. "Everyoae In the
I put the chain Clll the c1oar and
flcklng In weapons but also a juatlflcation for Ullng thole guns on the bull of sed to carry a Mace can In your han- called them off and let us sit at h1l nel......,..bood rqulrtnllen b e - opened It two lndler ulcl wart,
peraonal whim rather than societal need.
dbag or your panta pocket.
table.
to the blek door, and now two rbalr "Squire, Squirt, 8qalrt."
"Tbe rest of the world II going tQ think we're crazy," concludell morris
I didn't realize bow nervlous . "'nllllp m really toup out frllmtbecu~'t-'-blm."
Wbal lbe flaa11y wake up and
Janowitz, a Unlveralty ol. Chicago sociologist. "We're the only country that everyone wu until hent to villi a here,"! llid.
.
· Aftlr IUDdl, I tlecldeil to 10 lbop- ubdmnby I dldlt, I tGidbw, "Ia
repeatedly bas this ldnd of thing."
producer friend of mine Nllled
"You bave to be 011 your toer," Jllnllln Beverly D. I 11111t to. a L.A.,It's~manforNu II."
:

Today in histoi!y.

The Daily llt•-linei-Paat-3

l"omeroy-Middleport, OhRI .

the

us write

n.

Your new telephone directory is going to press very soon .
So now's the time to make any changes you'd like in the
way you're listed.
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eon • bodY

(cfi=l
&amp;EhERALTElEPHDnE
I

�-

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,romeroy=~iddleport, O!lio

,Monday, Aprlll3.-19jl) ·

·vaughan'•

Racine United Methodist . ·
reign as church champions
The Racine United Me~
were crowned cbampi0118 of the
Meigs County Church League here
Sundiy after claiming a 58-46 Win
over Heath U.M.C. in the tournament's championship game.
Racine took a S.O lead early in the
first quarter on buckets by Dave
Foreman, Jonathan Rees, and·
Bryan Wolfe.
Racine maintained iis lead
the half
took
athroughout
19-18 lead
withunW
fiveHeath
seconds
· remaining in the half.
Good hustle by Racine's guards
got the ball.to Dave Roush who made
a 30 foot desperation slxit at the buzzergaveRaclnea21H9lead. .
Racine scored first in the third
quarter and maintained a narrow
CHURCH LEAGUE CHAMP- The Racine Unlled
Methodist Church team captured the champlo111blp of

tbe Meigs Couaty Cburcb League Tournament with a
58-IC wiD over Heath. MemberB of the championship
team are front, 1-r, Jonathon Rees, Eddie "Bones"

Eagles split doubleheader
third. They combined to walk six
and fan five.
For Eastern Mike Bissell doubled
and singled, Griggs had two singles,
Rob Smith had two singles, Greg
Wigal a double, Gene Cole a single,
Werry a!ingle, and Gaul a single.
Eastern outhit Fort Frye 1().9, but
costly errors led to the Eagles'
downfall. In a game that could have
gone either way, Eastern committee
four errors in the fifth inning.
Silvus had a home nm and single
for the winners, along with Archer
who singled and doubled to lead the
wiiUlers.
In the second game, Eastern
showed new life while rolling to a 6-li
win. Rob Smith started for Eastern
and was relieved by winning pitcher
Greg Wigal. They fanned five and
walked five. Hall started for F. F.
and was relieved by Coley. They

BY SCO'IT WOLFE
BEVERLY - Eastern's Eagles
split a double header with Fort Frye
here Saturday afternoon. Eastern
dropped the first game in extra innings, 13-12, then came back with the
nightcap 6-li. Eastern is now 6-3
overall.
After a wild seven inning that saw
a lot of hard-hitting, base stealing,
and shabby defensive play by both
clubs, Fort Frye finally grabbed the
win in the eighth inning on a long
home run by Silvus that sailed over
the outfield fence.
Jeff Jones who started for Eastern
went two and twl)-thirds innings and
was relieved by Mark Holter. Greg
Wigal came on in the sixth to finish
up the game. That trio walked six
and fanned three.
Lawrence started for Fort Frye
and wsa relieved by Archer in the

r-;:====:::=::::::::;1

fin, Chandler, and Kidd all lined
singles.
I
Eastern plays Southern in a
The Daily Sentinel
showdown at Racine tonight.
(USPS I - I
Linescore :
AQh llloa of Mllumedia, IDe.
Eastern
000 650 010-12 10 6
PubiJBhe&lt;l every allemoon except Slllldly,
FF
023 511 001- 13 9 8
Monday through Friday, 111 CourtSir&lt;et. b)'
Batteries : Jones, Holter, Wigal
the Ohio Valley Publlahing C&lt;&gt;mpany •
Multimedia, Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio· IST&amp;t,
(LP) and Griggs. Lawrence, Archer
911'J-2156. Second clo5s poolage paid al
(WP) and Kane.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Line score (second game) :
Member: The A.ssoeiated Pre&amp;a,lnland DalEastern
012 102 0- 6 7 3
ly Press Association and the American
New-spiper Publlsbera AllaoclaUon, NatlUII.l
FF
000 311 0-5 7 0
Advertising Representative, Landlllfl
Batteries: Smith, Wigal (WP) and
Associates, 3191 Euclld Ave., Cleveland,
Ohio,4!11!.
Leonard. Hall, Coley and Chandler.

had a single and double with two batled in, also Ray Maxson a triple.
Winning pitcher Mark Holter went
six innings giving up one nm four
hits, no walks and striking out four.
Brian Well and Jewett finished for
Eastern.
Eric Tabler, Dan Wriston, T.
Lemon, and J. Miller each singled
for the Lancers. Dan Crits had a

Deron Jewett led Eastern with a
single double, and triple with two
RBI' s. Brian Collins had two singles
and four runs balled ·in. Todd Cundiff had two singles and Jim Carter

Marauder girls take second
Meigs came away with a second
place finish in girls' track here
recently, bowing to winner Belpre 7~
to 72. Ripley was third with 49 polnts,
while Warren had eight points.
Meigs had an outstanding first
place percentage, winning nine of 14
events, but couldn't place consistently lri other top spots.
Winners for Meigs were:
Laura Smith - Discus, 115' 7" ,
mile run 6:23.6, and the half-mile
run, 2.55.
Sheri Drehel - 100 yard dish.
Kristin Anderson .:... 440 yard dash.
Andrea Riggs - High jump.
Two mile relay - Winning team Kristin Anderson, Dixie Evlln,
Renee Willi.'l and Cathy Dean.

«0 relay - Winning team Paula Swisher, Lori Rupe, Andrea
Riggs, and Shari Drehel.
Mile Relay - Winning team Lori Rupe, Kristin Anderson, Vicky
Debord and Andrea Riggs.

Other place finishen; for Meigs
were :
Shot Put - Laura Smith, third;
Karen Goggins, fourth.
Long Jump - Paula Swisher,
second; Vicky DeBord, fourth.
100 M. Hurdles - Lori Rupe ,
second.
880 yard run - Krista! Sisson, fifth.
Meigs' team record is 21 wins
against just two losses.

.

~

Subscribers not desirl.nc to pay the carrier
rrwy remit in advance direct to The Dally
Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month buJI. Credit
will be givencarril!reachmonth.

Where Friendliness &amp; savings Go

CHICKEN
SALAD

Specials

Where Frhtnd,lh..ul Snlngs

.HIUSHIRE FARM

'2

Smoked Sausage
$18~.

LB.

DUNCAN HINES ASSORTED

SUGAR

GOLD
MEDAL

Limit 1 w/$10.00 Purchase

Beef Wieners

CHUNK, CRUSHED OR SLI~

·

~

&amp;9

PINEAPPLE........•............

$169LB.

FLOUR

REG., DRIP, ELECj PERK or ADC

COFFEE..............~~ .C;I!! •• ~

2,.
8
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JOB SQUAD
PAPER
6
'TOWELS ••••••••••••
29

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CHICKEN OF THE 'SEA
.

6lh

5-Lb.

oz.

Bag
WITH COUPON

'

CARDINAL
CREAMERY

g~

JUMBO

LB.

~~~.L••

HAWAIIAN PUNCH
.FRUIT .
.
.
46 OZ. CANS
DRINKS •.,•••••••••••••••••••••••••••

1-Lb.
Pkg .
Limit 1 Witll

-.....I
LOCA~ .I

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694·

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GRADE A DOZEN
EGGS ..........................
'

·WHITE
OR
ASSORTED

49-oz.

Box

ct.
Pkg.

FROSTY ACRES

_-VAllEY fARMS LARGE

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. . - - - - - . . . , _ .,.-----F~ROZEH FOOD VALUE~--....,---..

~----.....-. MOlE .,,...

Swimming
Pool

NORTHERN

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HIGH ST.

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C

DETE~GENT

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69

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Purchase

PAGE ST.

VALLEY.LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY
-

59

MAXWEll HOUS~

·

39~

JACK FROST
PUR~ CANE

~

KAHN'S BEEF &amp; JUMBO

DOL£

PER

BANANAS ................................. ~~:... .
PINK GRAPEFRUIT. ............. 5LB. 5149

ARCHWAY COOKIES.~.~~~~~!~~...2(r OFF

FOR AN APPOINTMENT CALL: (614) 992·5798

MIDDUPOIT, OHIO

. .

oz. ·

CAKE MIXES............~:...

%HAM
$249

TURKEYS ........................... 69~B.

7

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MAIL SIIBBCRlFnONB
Obloa&gt;MIW.,IVIqtolo
3 Month .. .. .. .. .. • .. .. ...... . 110.10
Sii month .... .......... . ......... $11.50

WATCH FOR GRAND OPENING SPECIAlS!

\

FARMER BROWN 18 LB.

1

19

aad 'lletl VIJ'IIaia
3 Moolh .. .. .. .................... lli.OO ,
6 Moolh .. ............. .. ......... pj,OO '
!Year .. .. .. .................... ~. 1111

!cH

RED RADISHES ..............4aoz. $1oo
CRISP CARROTS...................3 LB. 8!1

$159

1 Year . , .. .....•.. .. ........ .... • 133.110
Ra"'O.IIIIdo Oblo

BUTTERBALL TURKEYS.....99~B.

9

CHIQUITA OR DOLE

ffFECTIVE MONDAY APRIL 13, 1981

...·''.,.

·CAN' ED HAMS......................~ 5

SWIFT 10-12 LB. AVG .

2F
98~
LEITUCE.................. · ~

.

., -

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HEAD

WE HAVE MOVED

· ~·l·

·34.8. SWIFT

EACH

CRISP ICEBERG

WIENERS

NO SUGAR ADDED

LB.

Mixed,Light

TURKEY.ROAST...... ~~.~!~.~~!.~3 ~cH

KAHN'S REG. &amp; JUMil ~\

Veterans ·Memorial tbpital
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy. Ohio

7:00 a.m. til 5:00 p.m.
Saturday 7:00 a.m. til 3:00 p.m.
PHONE 992.g11 or 992-2709

I

· SWIFl2-LB. PKG.

KAHN;S

$1 ~8.

SWIFT 2 LB . PKG.

CANNED HAMS.............•.•..... ~9'!AcH

79~1A

3

•339
JURKEY ROAST....a.~~~::~•••••••

5-LB. SWIFT

$189 LB.

KAHN'S E.Z AXING

STORE HOURS: Monday thru Friday

LB.

WHOlf

. $219

BUCKET STEAK............. ,....

Polska-Kielbasa

WITH OFFICES LOCATED AT

555 PARK ST., MIDDLEPORT

29

... '

MACARONI
SALAD

HILLSHIRE FARM

JOHNNY A. BRAWNER, M. D.
GENERAL SURGEON

OUR NEW ADDRESS .WILL BE:

CHUCK .ROAST. ..................~ 1~

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SUPERMARKn

SMAil. SELECT 7-9 LB. AVG.

9

DILl
VALUES -

a·

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BONELESS

No subl:lcripUons by mall pennltted in toWJll
where home canie:rsetvice is available.

Office Hours: 8:30 a.m. - 5100 p.m.
Monday through Friday .

nd in Hand .

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BONELESS

SLICES .........................~·.. ~ •1.99
- .
5 ........................
.
LB• • , 59
_
.... •
.HALVE

SUPERMARKET

OPEN 7 DAYS
BAM TIL lOPM
CORNER OF LOCUST
&amp; PEARL ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

·

PRICES
" "' " " " " II Cent.s

...,ar .lna:

..

cara·,n·

SUBSCRIPTION RATEli
ByCarrlerorMetwRou&amp;t
One week ... .. .. . .. ............... 11.00
One Month ....... . . .. . . ... .. . ...... $f.40
One Year . . . .. . ..•.... . . ....•. , .. , .P2.80
SINGlE COPY
Daily " " " " '

PARTRIDGE
FRONTIER DEWXE RAT

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a·ul'JIt an's
•

49

WHOLE

~

PCISTMASTERo Send addrou lo The DaUy ·
Sentinel, Ill COurt St., Pomeroy, Ohio45789.

triple.
Dan Writon and Eric Tabler
shared pitching duties for Federal
Hocking, walking four and fanning
seven.
A big second inning sparked
Eastern's attack when Brian Well
led off with a walk, Cundiff singled
and Maxson tripled, Probert
followed with a single, Jewett
tripled, Holter walked and Carter
doubled. Carter stole third and
scored on a sacrifice fly by Brian
Collins to cap a seven-run Inning.
Eastern is now ~. its next game
on April13 at Eastern.

I ..

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AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP)- Tom Wat·
son turned In a final-round 71 and
scored his second Masters victory in
the 45th renewal of golf's annual ·
spring rite.
Watson, who won the Masters in
1977, won by two strokes with a 280
total, eight shots under par.

Eastern reserves bomb Lancers
STEWART - The Eastern Eagle
Reserves of Coach George Collins
coasted to 17-3 romp over Federal
Hocking here recently.

sley 18, Dennis ~oore eight, and Ke11
;
Dave Foreman had eight, Johnny Buckley two points.
·
For
Middleport
Dick
Owen
led
a!!
Davis nine, Bones Roush four,
Jonathan Reea and Robin (Pickle) scorers with 32 points. Doug Cottrel
Fortune two, and Scott Wolfe one sank 25, Rick Metger nine, and Ma~
McClung two.
· ·
point.
In the COIIIOiatlon point, SyraCIIIe . Each team received team trophies
U.M.C. edged Middleport F.irllt Blip- and each team member Individual
tlst, 69-88, for third place honors. trophlea for their respective
Neil Knight led the winnerB with_Z2, ltnlahes-

Watson takes Masters

combined for four strike outs and six
walks.
Nick Leonard led Eastern's winning attack with a double and single,
Gene Cole singled twice, Rob Smith
doubled and John Beaver singled.
Dyer led the losers with two
singles while McCarley, Coley, Grif-

8 AM TIL 1.0 ~M
CORNER Of I.OCQsr
&amp; PEARL ST.
MIDDI.EPORT, OH.

took lleCOIId Brian Hamilton 21, Jimmy Joe nem;

Is while Bryan · Wolfe

high acoring honors with 14 points.

three point lead throughout the
period. Dave Roush paced Racine In
the period with several long jumpers
from the corner, while Mlck Daven,..
port sparked Hea\h by missing only
one shot the entire game.
A healthy fourth quarter gave
Racine the 58-46 championship win.
Dave Roush led Racine with 18 poin-

Roush Robin "Pickle" Fortune, and Scott WoHe. Back
row _: Johuny Davis, Bryan Wolfe, Dave "Big Red"
Foreman, and Dave Roush. Not pictured are
scorekeeper Michelle Johnson, Jeff Sopher, and Perry
Hill. Michelle Johnson Photo.

. . . OPEN 1 DAYSr

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5g·•.

'

'. 6g·
.

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BRUSSIL SPROUTS or
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2~R89~·
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FROSTY AC. .. SWEn PEAS.~ ......3/kL pkp.
•1.00
.

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.1111' .I Half.......PINT. conAGE CHEESE $119.· .MIIPPED TOPPING..........................~.~~~...59'·
kUE BOIIIET
'

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MARGARINE ........~~~:

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', _

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.8oz.
. .

CREAM atEESE .......... ~~~:

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Glllll1 llmWWIRilll

T

BMQUET

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FRIED .CHICKEN~........................................

IIIOSII

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�Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

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Moncs.y, Apr11U,19f1. &lt;

Pomeroy-Midclleport, Ohio

Area ·deaths

I

· Corps of Engineers on the · Ohio
. Ina B. Massar
River for 22 years prior to his
Mrs. Ina B. Massar, 67, Tuppers retirement.
Surviving are his wife, Dorothy
Plains, died unexpectedly Saturday
while on a trip to Charleston, W.Va., Edwards Cashdolla.r; two
with a group of Meigs County Senior daughters, Dolores Jean Watson,
Reedsville, and Mary Jane Pryor,
Citizens.
The 34 persons from Meigs County Pittsburgh, Pa.; a son, Richard
had gone to Charleston to attend the Cashdollar, Huntington, W, Va.;
Ringling Brothers and Barnum and seven grandsons, Ryan, Joae'ph and
Bailey Circus and were at the circus John Charles Pryor and Geoffrey
when Mrs. Massar became ill. She Watson, arid three granddaughters,
died enroute to a Charleston Lisa Watson and Heather and Susan
Cashdollar.
hospital.
Services will be held .at 2 p.m. ·
Born at Tuppers Plains, she was a
Tuesday
at the White Funeral Home
daughter of the late Elias and Vietta
in
Coolville
with the Rev. Elden
Reed Springer. She was a member
Blake
officiaitng.
Burial will be in
of the Tuppers Plains Christian ·
Church and attended the St. Paul's Reedsville Cemetery. Friends may
Unitect Methodist Church. She was a call at the funeral home at anytime.
member of the · Daughters rl Masonic rites will be conducted at
America Lodge at Chester, the Rose 7:30 this evening at the funeral
Garden Club of Tuppers Plains, the home.
Ladies Auxiliary of Veterans Wilhelmina M. Roedel
·Memorial Hospital and the Meigs
Mrs. Wilhelmina Mohlenpah
Senior Citizens.
Roedel, 90, well known fonner
Mrs. Massar had been an employe Pomeroy resident, died Saturday
at Eastern High School for 18 years evening at the Medical Center
where she was employed as a cook. Hospital in Chillicothe.
She had spent her entire life in the
Mrs. Roedel was a daughter of the
Reedsville-Tuppers Plains area.
late Ferdinand' and Elizabeth
Besides her parents, she was Mohlenpah. She was married to
preceded in death by her husband, Pomeroy businessman, John Oscar
Harold W. Massar in 1979, and a Roedel on Sept. 6, 1922, and be
brother, Roy Springer.
preceded her in death in August,
Surviving are a foster daughter, 1963. Two brothers, John and
Mrs. Thomas (Becky) Mankin, Frederick Mohlenpah, also
Pomeroy, and several cousins.
preceded Mrs. Roedel in death.
Services will be held at 3:30p.m.
Mrs. Roedel was a 1914 graduate
Tuesday at the White Funeral Home of Ohio State University. She was a
in Coolville with the Rev. Richard charter member rl Alpha PI
Thomas officiating. Burial will be in Sorority and a charter member of
Meigs Memory Gardens.
the Pomeroy Garden Club. She was
Friends may call at the funeral a member of Grace Episcopal Chur·
. home at anytime.
ch in Pomeroy where she had served
as treasurer for several years.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs.
Alfred J. Cashdollar
Robert (Martha ) Hamm,
Alfred J. Cashdollar, 66, Reed- Chillicothe, and three grandsville, _died at his resid~nce Saturday daughters, Mrs. Steve (Barbara)
followmg an extended Illness.
Hastings, Gaithersburg, Md.; Mrs.
He was born at East Liverpool, a Larry (Jeanne) Pahl, Chillicothe,
son of the late Chauncy C. Cash- and Laura Hamm, also of
dollar and the late Jane Badgley Chillicothe.
Cashdollar Powell. He was also
Services will be held at 10:30 a.m.
preceded in death by a son, Ronald.
Tuesday at Grace Episcopal Church
Mr . .Cashdollar was a member of with the Rev. Robert Graves and the
the St. Stevens Episcopal Church in Rev. Harold Deeth rlficiating.
East Liverpool; a member of Burial will be in Beech Grove Cenr
Coolville Lodge 337, F&amp;AM. He was tery. Friends may call at the Ewing
a veteran of World War II and had Funeral Home anytime after 4 p.m.
been employed with the U. S. Anny today.

29 states consi(Jer gas&lt;lline tax ift..cre~ses
'

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.

By Alloclated Prell.
With America's high~ys ever
more pitted, poeked and potholed, 29
states are considering taking the
bumps out of the J,"OBds by bOosting
their gasoline .taxl!!l by up to a
nickel. Three stale! have already
approved gas tax ino;reases.
It's not that _federal, state and
local governments haven't been
repairing the roads. But reduced
gaBoline collliumption has nibbled
away .a t the \faditional sowce of·
maintenance money - the fuel tax.
And the cost or" making road repairs
has soared.
Fifty-three percent of the paved
road network, or about 1 million
miles, was cracked, buckling or
otherwise in" disrepair last. year,
compared with 42 percent the year
before, says the Road Information
Program, , !' research organization

funded · by !he motor vehicle in.dustry..
• . ·•· '.
· · ·'
.Thtiee bl!J11PY roads cost 'drivers
$20 billion in wasted fueland an additional $6 billlon . in car and tire
•damage - or an average of '1!1Hor
each motorial, according to the
reaenrch group.
state 1\11(1 !Oc~ treasuries will
spend about $600 inil)ion more than·
· they will take in this y~ for higlr
way constructi&lt;~n and repairs,' the
U.S. Transportation Departmezt
has estimated.
The South Dakota j.egislature
raised its gas tax from 12 cents to a
national high of 13 cents a gallon, effective April I. Utah has increased
its tax from 9 to n cents. A bill
raising Idaho's 9\1-cent tax 1!1 11\1
cents on July I was signed into law
last week.
State gasoline taxes range from 5

' ~

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'.

cents ·a g~on ' in Teus to Sot!th · the. }ugbway Uaen F~oli ln
Dakota's ne\lo 13-cent tate. Most · Washington, a lobliying group ~
states are in the ~to u.eent range. · ded"bY blglnriiy ·CCJIIII:ructlon conSome states want to change from a tra~imdau~.
.
set per-gallon levy to a tax based on
A select COIIlinlttee oftbe Arizona
Percentage of the price at the· Transporiatlm ~haya the
p1!J11p, tying the tax rate to the rising state Will
bllllon to flO billion
price of gasoline. ·
to meet high\I!'By COIIItructiCII and
"With ronllervati&lt;Jil ·and higher- maintenance during the next
mileage cars, there's lesa money ·decade. For the same periO!i,
going into state highway lunda. But . revenues frOm the alate's .keot-a.there are more highway ~ gaUQn gasolJI!.e tax will amount to .
tenance needs than ever," said about$2.2billlon.
·
Jerry Bastarache, spokesman ·for

a

need"

.

UMW.

Five emergenc~ calls were answered by local units over the
weekend, the Meigs Emergency
Medical Ser\rice reports.
On Saturday at 10:20 p.m., Gary
Hart from ta]ten -til Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the Pomeroy
Unit and at 11:28 a.m., the Racine
Unit took Patrick Snyder to
Veterans Memorial. At 9:19 p.m.,
Tammy .Lane was taken 'from the
Racine Fire Station to Veterans
MewmoriaL
On Sunday at 10:15 a.m., the
Racine Unit look Mrs. Ona Arix
from the fire station to Veterans
Memorial Hospital and the Pomeroy
Unit at 1:50 p.m. took Maggie
Gilmore from the Pomeroy Health
Care Center to Veterans MemoriaL

Northern Lights glow
A red glow in the sky over the

Mulberry Heights area of Pomeroy
late Sunday night brought concerned
calls from residents who thought,
perhaps, there was a serious fire
near the community, The Pomeroy
Police Deparbnent cahned the concern, however. The glow was the
Northern Lights, police said.

Not all the .waters in all the rivers

Obtain license

••

~vln Gene Stewart, 21, Mid(Continued from page 1)
dleport .Route J, and Araka Renee
President Sam Church-told him he Grate, 18, Pomeroy Route 3.
had several issues to discuss, but he ·.--.-:.----'-:"----.,refused to speculate on how the talks .
wouldgo.
.
"I won't have any idea unW ·I aee
wl\atbe'sgo~tosay,"Brownsaid. ·
Brown ,did say lie was not op.
timistlc that the strike, which en,,
tered its 19th. day M;onday, would .·
531 JACKSON ~ ·A! -35 WI!ST
end soon, and But Compton,
Phone 4411·452&lt;1
Investigates theft
president of Loca12264 in Pike Coun, ·
BMOAIN MATME'.S ON SAT. SUN
The Meigs County sherifrs depart- ty, Ky., agreed. ·
A,t.L SEATS JUST I UO
ADII/SSION EVEWY nA!'SlMY I 1.50
ment is investigaling the theft of a
" ... The miners want the right
. thtu 'I'II!IISOIIY I
ceramic yard ornament from the working situation. They're not going
lawn of Mrs. C. B. Lamp, Tuppers to settle for·the stuff that came back
Plains.
last time," Compton ilaid.
But be predicted that negotiators .
would
be able to come·up with a ten- .
Veterans Memorial
tatlve settlement by April 'n and
Saturday Admissions,-Robert that miners would return to work by
Hawley, Pomeroy; Judith Crow, May D.
Middleport; Mary Stewart,
"That's just my opinion, but all
Pomeroy.
they're going to do is take some of
Saturday Discharge--Eliza Wolfe. the stipulations out,'' he said.
Sunday Admissions-On Arix,
Burdette · Ctllwe, president of
Racine; Maggie Gilmore, Pomeroy. District 31 in Fainnont, W.Va., said
Sunday Discharges--Stella that if the BCOA faDed to come
Grueser, Lorna Grindley.
around on issues important to the
rank andn file, the strike would drag
Will meet Tuesday
on . .
"I'm hopeful, of Course, that It
Racine Lodge 461, Free arid Acisn't
something long and drawn
cepted Masons, will meet at 7:30
out,"
he
added. "President Church
p.m. Tuesday at the temple. All
is
hopeful,
too."
Master Masons are invited.
d
Scattered picketing, meanwhile,
Couple en S marriage was reported over the weekend. But
In Meigs County Conunon Pleas the coalfields were quiet following
court the marriage of Rex D. Vance reports of violence in Kentucky,
Ohio and Virginia las~ week.
and Karen D. Vance was dissolved.

-:-:-=::::==========

.._-:::::.:=.::_::___:____:__....-________._____

HAPPY
EASTER
TO ALL
SPECIALS GOOD
APRIL 13-18

- ----

•' .

.

'

Meigs County happenings. .
EmergeJJ,cy runs

:::::--....__

.

. By Jeff lllllem7. Pcmeroy

Ga.t ('.o!gmptsl
The young centiuim felt siCk. . 1 His gleaming anoor seemed like
lead, W11ightng b!m down WltD be.
' . thought he would llil)k into the
. ground and suffocate. It aeemed
88 If the.blailnc orb of the sun
-, , would~ the armor to hi! body.
' Marius railed a trembling
hind to wipe hts sweating brow;
1
, it came away dripping with
mcUture.
' _ Leonus, a huge, hulking brute
. of a mao walked up to ))is youthful friend: "Ho, Martus!," be
bellowed in his deep stentorian
voice. "You seem much too grim
today. IB acmethlng wrong?"
Martus turned to his comrade,
llhlllng the best be could and
failing lillaerably. "No. Nothing
I Is wrong. Whatcouldbewrong?"
1.eonua laughed. "Perhaps a
flaming-haired wench will draw . ·
you from the ·abyas you seem to
be lOIIt in."
"I don't think so ... "
"Nonsense," roared the
maasive Roman. "It'll cure you
of whatever eats at you like a

. cancer. Come.''
Obedient in flesh but not in
spirit, Marius followed Leonus to
a nearby inn.
The second round of ale served
to Ughten the dart moodMarius
found had taken over hts soul. He
lipped at it, savoring the strong
taste. Yet still be W88 withdrawn.
Leoous eyed him appratstngly.
He knew all his friend's moods,
dlsJ!bs and other facta of his personality. 1bia W88 SOrnethlog
new. "What in Jupiter's name Is
bothering you, Martus?" He
paUied, then with dawning
IWiilaUm: "You would think
you'd never seen men die
before."
Martus downed the rest of his
clrinl!,and folded his arma on the
table. He - lilent for a long
moment, then: "Never have I
aeen 1 man like him. So cocksure
ol hlnllelf; like he alwaya knew
nothing would happen to him. He
was 10 gentle and kind."
uFor a Jew," 1..4'0nus interjected, ~a SWig of his ale.
· "Does a man's race determine
when and how he should meet his
end? Beca111e be W88 a Jew, does·
that mean be had to die?"
Leoo1111 leaned back on hi!

stool. "Dangerous thoughts, my
friend. Such 1 • could leail to
yoqr imprlaoliJ)Ient Qr worse." .
Martus stood. "After whr t I
have seen today, Leonus, nothing
· could frighten me at all. In fact, I
welcome Death."
In the doorway, red cloak
rustling in the dry wind, stood a
bald man. Another centurion.
'.'Mariusl Leonus!"
Antonius ~t down at the table.
"A flagon of ale for myself and
my friends.!' As the tavernkeeper busied hlmaelf, the new
arrival beamed -at his companions. "S!ICh a fine day. It
makes one feel even more alive,
does lt not?"
·
Martus sipped at his fresh ale ..
His eyes were.locked on the centre of the table. "Ills, for some."
Antonius exchanged glances
with Leonus. He was puzzled
about the gloomy mood of the
leel\llged soldier. Martus was
usually happy and carefree.
"What's the matter?," he asked.
"Nothing," Marius mumbled,
walking away.
After he had left, Antorilus rose
to follow but a gesture from
Leonus stopped him. "Leave the
boy alone. He needs time to biJn.
self.''
"What is eating at him?"
Leonus smiled. "It's the thing
we did today. It stick! In his
gullet like bad mest. He has Utile
taste for the blood of innocents."
"But he had to die," Antonius
said. "He and his kind meant to
upset our delicate government.
Pacifista! PAH!! '
"It doe~~~'t matter to Martus.
He can't accept that he joined in
causing a man's death. The
young are often like that. Dley
aee the world through ~t
eyes; their ears fall to hear the ·
roarofUfe."
"Poetry," scoffed the hardsouled mao whO had personally
oaWied death and destruction.
"Non-regulaUCII. ''
The two men downed their
drinkl with slow ease. The room
was prepaot with tension.
LeonusCO!Jid ~lute it.
Martus walked down the cobbled street, each step a plodding
infinity of motion. He never
looked up or in any other direction but down. His bean beat
slowly, tiredly.

A bird cried mournfully,
Marilis looked up. '
His gaze rested on a hill outside
of town. Three CI'()Uolike struc:tures' SWod like wooden sentinels;
Dark shapes hung from lhem. ·
Martus felt .a lump in ))is chest
rise. He knew he had to go there
for sonie reason. He was drawn to
that place for aome purpose.
He kept walking.
Ten mlnule!i later, be stood at
the foot of the centre cross. He
looked up into alghtleas eyes that
before had been . blazing with
great power, A lear came to his
eyes.
(FORGIVE TiiEM, FATHER

STEAK

Thinking about buying
a new car?

lb. '"..... /..

CATSUP

79$

2

CORN , 3/'1"
16'12 oz. Be"v Crocker

The Farmers Bank is making
new car loans.

Member FDIC

GREEN BEANS

3 1""
18'/z oz. Be"v crocker

CAKE ,

.,29

MIXES.

320Z. AJAX

3 LB. I( RAFT

·fROSTING

Come in and talk to us about our
competitive rates on new car loans.

Farmers
Bank

~z. · 99$

15'12 oz. LIBBY'S

16h oz. LIBBY'S

you/'.

Free swim day

20 oz. Del Monte
Sliced or Crushed

PINEAPPLE

you."
The man Slniled · in a wise
fashion. "It's not our way to hold
youto blame. Your corisclence is
your jUdge. All we feel is love for

"Love?," echoed Marius sar. c8stlcally. "We've killed your
leader. I myself drove the nails
into his hands and feet. Don't I
deserve punishment?"
''Only you can decide that, my
son."
"Don't call me your son! I'm a
Roman centurion and I ... "
1
• ... Am still a · child of the
Lord," the man finished. He
looked up at the hanging figure.
... )
"He was quite a man, was he
He fen to his knees in anguish.
not?"
( ... TiiEY KNOW NOT WHAT
Marius sheathed his sword. "I
...)
suppose so."
' "I'm sorry," he whispered .to
Wlhearing ears.
. "INRI," read the man. ~~King
of the Jews."
(... TiiEYDO.)
"He was no king," Marius snor"Not all the waters, in all the
ted. "He had no kingdom."
rivers can wash the blood from
The stranger laughed, his voice
my hands."
.
a pealing bell. "He was king of a
He drew his sword from its
greter kingdom than any Caesar
scabbard and placed the blade's
will ever know."
point to his throat.
"It's getting dark," Marius
A hand touched his shoulder
stated, wanting to change the ungently.
comfortable subject. "I Must
Marius turned. A lean, broadreturn to the city. After today I
shouldered man in a purple and
can
never be proud of being a
white robe stood there, smiling
Roman centurion." A pause.
sadly.
"Didyouknowhlmwell?" ·
"That's not the way, my son."
"AS well 88 any person could."
"Who are you?"
"A friend. Would my name ·
Mariuslooked once more on the
matter If I had been a moment
dead man and he shuddered.
later?"
"Golgotha is such a lonely place
"You're a Jew. Whyshouldyou
~ die. Yet he never cried out in
care what happens to a Roman?
rage and pain. It was like it was
We've surely done enough to
natural for him to be crucified
. you."
and abused." ~ wa~tl)d away inThe man smiled in a wise
to the aftemoori stillness. "Good
fasblm. "It's not our way to hold
evening."
you to blame. Y-our conscience Is
"To you arid vours," said the
your judge. All we feel is love for
stranger.
you."
On the road·leading back to the
"Love?" echoed Martus sarcity, the .hoy tqmed arid looked
castically. "We've killed your
back me final nme. He was right.
leader." I myaelf drove the naDs
Golgotha was a lonely place to
into his banda and feet. Don't I
die.
deserve punlslment?"
The late aftetnoun sun bathed
"Only you can decide that, my
the hill in' soft, radiant Ught.
son."
Fr&lt;lll the Nortb a cool wind
41
Whoareyou?"
crisply laved the scene of death.
"A friend. Would my name
A bird cried piercingly and
matter If I had been a moment
clouds rapidly covered the yellow
later?"
face of the sun.
"You're a Jew. Why should you
A bright fire in the soul of man
care what happens to a Roman?
dimmed noticeably.
We've surely done enough to
Jes1111 had died.

$169 CUBE $239
lb.

Meigs, Mason.
A rea I-Iappenings

"'DIE ITA'IUJ OF TBE JI'BI TODAY'' - tile ........ W• I gt.., D. c., !Wfolk, Clleii.U IIIII
ilple • sud by Mack El1ll, 111111r 11111e1t IPIIdll · ~. Be II plellaed bere willl Mn. Mlldnd Glllbl,
tile Aa-. dee, wiNlll be lddr111ed tile Bellini nt.a al tile CeL t'lluiM lAwit Clu!pt- al Pelal
1111p a.pter a1 tile DaPIIn t1 tile Ph •M, left,
a a-t u., w1111 lm!l'l1
As I I Reui.U. a&amp; alirlld IIIIDI 1'111 FliiiiJ It , allier E mherl tl tile O.pt«, ul Mn. Miry lay
'tile llllp IlL IIIII IlM .._dille GBIIIIee 1M Yllt, ..... tltllellll&amp;ela
I

Sr•..,

n. -

~Aichholz to be Eight &amp; Forty guest

MIDDLEPORT-The Middleport
pool will opert on May 23 with a free
day of swimming.
Meeting this week the Middleport
Recreation Cmunittee composed of
Otarles Caaaell, · llfeS!denl, David
Baker and Judy Crooks, set the
opening date, lees for the year and
hired personnel. Pat Kitchen was
agaiD retained as the pool and park
dirctor. Several Ufe guards were
hired but sUil to be hired Is a water
safety lnstnictor. Anyone interested
in that ]101iti011 can get an appllcaUon at Middleport Village hall.
Dally prices for swimming will be
'1.50 for adults and '1 for students.
Season passes will be Pl with family
paases to be S30 plus ~ for each
child. Tickets can be purchased at
thepool.
.
Swimming leiiSOill will be '12 for
the flnt cb1ld tn a family and '10 for
e.dJ additional cb1ld in the same
r.mtty, For adults, the charge will
'bef15. Colt for junior andaenior life
11ving COUI'i&amp;l will be $15. Pool rental fees have been llet !Or~ for the
·ftnt hour and f25 for two or more
boun wblch includes life guard service. Hours o1 the pool operation
will beanoouoced.later.

Dr. Randolph joins
Gallipolis p,ractice
Dr. George W. Davis, Optometrist
at 458 Second Avenue in Gallipolis,
announces his association in the
practice of Optometry with Dr.
Dennis L. Randolph.
Dr. Randolph, a
life-long resident
of Athens County,
graduated from
The Ohio State
University, College of Optometry
.
in l!fn. A Beta RANDOLPH
Slgnla Kappa Honor graduate, Dr.
Randolph entered the U. S. Air Force where he served as staff OJ&gt;"
tometrist at Eglin Regional Hospital,

in Florida .

Dr. Randolph Is a member of The
American Optometric Association,
certified with the National Board of
Examiners in Optometry, a member
of the Armed Forces Optometry
Society, and the Ohio Optometric .
Association. He is also a member of
Star Grange in Meigs County.
Licensed to practice Optometry in
Ohio, West Virginia, and Kentucky,
Dr. Randolh offers areas of special
interest including contact lenses and
pediatric visual services. Dr. Randolph and his wife, Myla, currently
reside in Gallipolis with their two
children, Charles and James
Patrick.

Tribute to Mary K. Holter
highlights Chester D of A
A tribute to Mary K. Holter, cap-

deputy, thanked the members who

tain rl the· District 13 team, · assisted at the rally.
highlighted the Tuesday night
Mrs. Holter reported on attending
meeting of the Chester Council 323, the 66th rally of District 10 at
Daughters of America, held Hornersville. · Others going were
Tuesday night at the hall.
Doris Grueaer, Mrs. Ritchie, Marcia

Mrs. Holter was escorted to the ·Keller, and Charlotte Grant.
altar where Mrs. Ada Morris recited
Others attending Tuesday night's
an original poem in tribute to her meeting were Dixie Beair, Thelma
work at the recent district rally held McMannis, Unda Beuley, Opal
at the Syracuse Elementary School. Hollon, Letha Morris, Thelma
At the conclusion, Mrs. Holter was White, Daisy Canter, Margaret Anr
presented a gift from the district.
burger, Margaret Tuttle, Inzy
She responded with appropriate Newell, Enna Cleland, Betty Roush,
comments of appreciation for the Ada Bissell, Mae McPeek, Ethel
gift and the assistance at the rally.
Orr, Doria Gruesser, Virginia
Ckarlotte Grant, councilor, Newlun, Marcia Keller, . ~tty
presided at the meeting attended by Cbristopherson, . Lora DamewOod,
35 members. · New members of Leona Hensley, Sandy White, Goldie
Chester Council Initiated at the Frederick, Zelda Weber, Ada Neut·
dtsirict rally are Betty Christopher· zling, Carolyn Holley, Mary
son, Cathy Clifford, and Pamela Showalter, Pauline Ridenour, Eileen
Davis. Dorothy !Utchie, distict Martin, Charlotte Smith.

'Round Meigs Local
Would you llke to know more about
our bond issue? Do you have Ume to
help us in our
. ?, If SO,
C8IDplllgJl
please call my of.
flee at 992-2153
and leave your
name and phone
nwnber. We will
get back to you as
soon as possible.
. We need your
help!
SUPT. GLEASON
Twenty-eight elementary students
leamed a great deal about ceramics
this week at Rutland Elementary.
Debbie Hill, our elementary art instn:~tJr, and Kathy Bachman, the
ceramic arUst, worked diligently
with these students for two full days.

remind all motorists to be on the
lookout for students who will be
playing hear the roads. We have
already cauUoned some yoWJgsters
who were playing rather roughly
while waiting for a bUB pickup. Uwe
are all more cautious, hopefully we
can prevent unnecessary accidents.
John Arnott, the bead teacher at
Middleport Elementary, has mentioned that he is actively working on
replacing the small basketball bank·
hoard on the Middleport Elementary
playgrounds. It seems the old one
was ready to fall down so it was
taken down for repairs.

The Salem Center ball diamond is
shaping up nicely. The volunteer
parents have built a new backstop,
plowed and disced the infield area,
We would llke te express our deep and are planning on sowing grass.
appreciation to these people for Hopefully the diamond will be ready
making tiWi program possible. Doug before too long.
Behnke, the Rutland .Elementary
Principal, also should be thanked for
Bob Morris, Principal at
hts cooperatiOn and help in the Pomeroy, is presently recovermg
program.
from surgery. At this time, Bob ts
still In Veterans Memorial Hospital
Kindergarten registration will be on Mulberry Heights, but should be
coming up in the near future. More released soon. We all hope he has a
information will be given out when speedy recovery.
we have the procedure finalized.
' -U I can be of any assistance to you,
With spring here and the tenr please feel free to contact me at ~
peratures soaring, .we would like to 2153.

Election ol olficen for 1981~ will
be hlld at a ~ ol the Eutern.
Jli&amp;h lldloolllllld Boult.. at 7:80
p.m. TIMdaJ In tbt band room.
Pianl Wllllllo lie IOide for the ....
oua1 bud banquet to be be1d April
II.

SVIGBaY- MI. left, ul Jay 9 II rr, ~- tl Mr. ad.
lb. Aha R I tr, Re11e 1, Ruilnlle, WID _...., .,_ beart
MiW)I&amp;Niw'IR Jl!rdiiC I '•tote .... ......_O.tlllle
twt.llll I I I 3 ...1 I!SCII) . . . . . I&amp;IIIt' Jllllilrllwe&amp;....._..
... ta'' I tl tile flmiiJ willlllap le'fWII IIUe lllelll'rWIJ lo llelp
. . . 1!1111J fw .. .....,, '1'IIII .... lllel IIIIriiiig II I L1L wiD be
lllrilt'aP
III'Jio'.:'t laaaU...'I
1l I Jlhlni-Jiij. • .,._w' PIJ ...... Il (Its_, ...
.........11'1 " , ................. 111-*ad l

Frtili

I,:11:PIIIs;Gital'aGI

Your ·community Owned Bank

.llw' i

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•

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.,. ·

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'- •

D•llv Sentinel

. 01(]( TRACY

Television
·APA-13, tlla1
EV~NIIIG

e:oci

• •

CD G CD O CIJ@lW t l NEws
CD
ROSS BAGLEY $HOW
(CONTJNUED FIIOM DAYTIME)
(l)
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
(]) ABC HEWS
(]) PADDINGTOH BEAR In lhis

premiere episode

T~T'

MA'I8E

YOU

~OME

NOT

'

OH1oltEAn liH!
MU!IT'VE! HAP A
FIWNT-ROW, W I~·

TO

INOIAIJS' CA&amp;IIIEAT lf&gt;JOIAIII!I'
~OOD-- THEN ·

GUN.• &amp;EPORIE I . LIVE ,TO TEL~
REPORT YOU TO
ANYONE!
THE MOUNTIES.!

II .

SCReeN VIIOW OF
U!l GRAPP~I"'' ~11&lt;1!
ROMANTIC II&gt; lOT§
JUS.T f&gt;JOWl

PLAY DIRTY

TRICK I

t.tr .Gruber; Mr.Curry:andAunt Lucy
who conies for a short visit .
(jJ) OVER EASV Guest SingorRo·

•

,
6::10

. 8:61
7:00

.

semary Clooney . HOst: Hugtl
Downs.
(Closed-C aptioned;
U.S.A.)
CD 8 CD NBC HEWS
(I) BOB NEWHART SHOW
(]) CROWN ME WITH KISSES,
JOSIE DOBBS
0 CIJ®J CBS HEWS
(I) WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
(jJ) LILIAS, YOGA AND YOU
iJ2) &amp;I ABC HEWS
CD .CBNUPDATENEWS
(]) 8 PM MAGAZINE
CD NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
(!) CIRCUS WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS The world's premier big·top

Here's Mr. Easter bunny ·
. Happy as can be,
Surrounded by his Easter eggs
How many do you see?

As the glorious Easter
Day draws near,
Let's sing of the blessings .
That we hold dear.
Name ____ Age
Address
Phone

Name ____ Age
Address
Phone

Join the egg-Citement
On this Easter day,
And point these eggs
In a colorful way!
Name
Address

This Easter spirit of
Peace and love,
Is brought to light by
The Easter Dove.

Age _ _ __
Phone

performers compete in four ca-

BORNLOOER

tegories : trick riding, juggling,
trampoline and tl~ing trapeze .
(I) ALLIN THE FAMILY
'
(])IJ2) Gl FAMILY FEUD
(!) NASHVILL~ DN THE ROAD
0 @ TICTAC DOUGH
(I) (jJ)
MACNEIL-LEHRER
REPORT
!liD NEWS
7:30 (]) 8 BULLSEYE
CD WORDS OF HOPE
(I) SANFORD AND SOH
(]) fiJ CIJ JOKER' S WILD
(!) ®l HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
Cil (jJ) DICK CAVETT SHOW
Guests: James Wolco tt and Clive
James, tele'.'ision critics , Part I.
iJ2) II FACE THE MUSIC
7:58 CD CBH UPDATE NEWS
a:DD CD 8 CD LITTLEHOUSEONTHE

I-lOW CAI.J '()U GR\TIG\U:.
M'&lt; fNtJT\00" ,
!

~

-

Name
Address

-I,
l

'I&amp;C JEWELRJ

I~IJ~

~

•i

...
•! ~
4-1&amp;

LAID AIJ f!.0{t) I
~\TH612 ...

OH-ER· l JUST CAME
IN T' APOL061ZE FOR
~-~__,

.fR .. OH,6EE .-

•

-1 THINK ANNIE 1'/ANTS
TO APOLOE.IZE FOR
THIHKIHEi YOU I'IERE

GEE - WHEN
'IOOR lllf6U\Gf

TliE "GRAY AVENGER:'

l Gtii'IIT I'IAS

01( , LIXIR ~

YOU, DR. S!JE ...

CAME CfF AN'

PRAIRIE Charles and Caroline In·
galls are dismayed when they learn

THAT DETECTIVE I'IOOLII
HAVE CAUGHT ME IF
IT WEREN'T FOR YOO
AND GANDY, ANNIE '"

2. Entries will bi! judged in
two different age
categories, ages .4-8 and
ages 9-12.

Three lovely lilies
All in a row ...
Musn'r be picked or
They won't grow!

3. Children may enter as
many•pictures as they like
bu~ can only win one prize.
4. Crayons only may be used to color pictures.

5. Decisions of the judge
will be final.

'

Fluffy little chicks
Huodle together,
Basking In the beautiful
Easter weather!

Name ____ Age
Address
Phone

THf

Hesh up
an' tid4
4ernosel

Name ____ Age
Address
Phone

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP

1

ai

Kingsbury Home Sales

POMEROY, OH.

(Gtosed-C aptioned; U. S.A.)
CD AMERICAN CATHOLIC
C!J MOVIE~COMEDY)*" "Gilda ,

Llvel" 1i80

.'

1. Just color one or more
of the drawings on these
pages, fill in the blanks
and take your entry to the
sponsoring . store before
5:00p.m., April 18th.

that· Laura has broken her en·
gagementlo Almanza Wilder. but
his siste r devises a plan to get the
lovers be ck t ogether in fro nt of a
mini st er . (Repeat; 60 mins .)

([) NIGHT GALLERY
(j) tUJ GJ THAT'S INCREDIBLE :
SPECIALEDITIONNO.ll Anamoz in g e• hib ition of marks manshipby e
blind archer and a medical dis ·
covery that puts an en d t o the prob lem or sweaty palms are the alt new
se gments highlighting reprise pre·
sent eli ons of such favorite stories
as the horse who ropes calves. the
domino wizard . and the man whose
frightening dreams came true in the
form ol Hurricane Fredric . (60
mins .)
.
CJ CIJ ®l PRIVATE BENJAMIN
With ill disguised glee . Captain
Lewis orde rs Pvt. Benjam in to un dertake the annual Jungle swamp
Survi._.al Compet ition, an arduous
ordeal lor ewen the most hardened
soldier.
QD GREAT PERFORMANCES
'Leonard Bernstein Co nducts
Mahler: Symphony No . 2 'Resur·
re c t ion'' FromEngtand' sEiyCathe dral, Bern stei n and the London
Symphony perform the 'Resurrecti o n' with solo i sts Dame Janet
Baker and Sheila Armstrong . (2
· hrs.)
(jJ) REACH FOR THE SUN
a::io CIJ NEW BIBLE BAFFLE SHOW
(]) BASEBALL Atlanta Braves we
Ho uston Astroa
g (]) ®J
TWO OF US
Brentwood rec•ives a real educa·
tion in American teenage c ustoms
as he co pes wnri the chaos ot e
teenage slumber party.
(jJ) SONG BY SONG 'Alan Jay
Lerner' This tribute to one of Amer·
lea ' s greatest lYricists features
performances by Gemma Crave n.
Millicen t Martin lnd lena Horne.
(60 mlns.)
a,M CD CBNUPDATEHEWS
9:00 (]) .
BOB HOPE 'S SPRING
FLING Bob Hope salutes glamour
and comedy In this seasonal
special with guestl!lloni Anderson,
Jill St. John, Brdoke Shields and
special ouest afar Melissa Men cheater. (60 mine .)
CD 7DDCLUB
lj)il})QJDYHAlSTYPandomoni um
erupts in the DenVer courthouse a a
Blake Carrington arrives to stand
trial to r the murder ol Steven's
love r, Ted ; Laird battles wits with
the assistant o.A.; Kryatte gets 8
headyt'as te of corporate pQwer;
and Fallon risks Sle't'en's love in e
't'&amp;in attempt to convince the jury of
her father' s innocence. (60 mins .)
~ M. A.S.H. A loll or lrom
Radar brighten' Colonel Potter 's
day, until Klln'ger accidentally
breaks his eve glaaaes.
i ::IO. CJ) MOVIE ·!COMEDY) ' " '
"Heavin Can Welt" 1878
• (I) ~ HOUSE CALLS' Dr.
Weatherby , who Ia having his
h o use painted and is allergic to
paint fumes, tricks Ann Anderson
tnto inviting hWn to stay at her

CONTEST RULES

OH.

e (])

~artment.

(11) AM~RICAil SHORT STORY
'Paul' a Case' Tlliiaia Willa Cather's
tale of a young man in Pittsburgh
whoatealsmoneytromanemployer
to gain entry toj• world or glamour

BARNEY

and refinementr (80 mina.)
(!) GI!OIIGE BURNS IN

JUGHAID··DON'T
CHUNK THAT 'NANNER
ON TH' GROUND'

Flowers in ·a pot ... see
.How -they bloom!
What a·colorfl.:ll bouquet
To fill the rooml
Name
Addtess

Worship together on this
· Bright Easter morn.
And celebrate the d9Y
Christ was reborn.

look through.the window,
What sto you see? ·
All colors Qnd shapes and

In our Easter bonnets
Of Sp~ngy hues, .
tolor rhem your best
1\eds and blues!

1M Easter lily!

Nime --_-- - Address
Phone

Age

Phone

·· ' s D1irJ Valley

_.......;..._• •

MARGUERITE SHOES

~~O~H~....._._.J......._:~~~~O~H~..........L.........:~

.*

~

'

e

NASHVILLE??? George Burna
stars In his llf-at country mualc
IPtCIII with Q~lltS Loretta Lynn,
Larry Gatlin e~d the Gatlin Broth. ere Band, Minrtie Pearl , Roy Ac:ul'
and the Granb Ole Opry Radio
Show, an- Be~ Smathera and hit
Cloqgera. (80 !ftlnt.)
(I) l!ll • SO"P J. .alca Ia kid·
napped by l communiata and
whlakad otf to,Malaguay. while El.
, plotUng tn lnvaeion of his troptc:al
hOmtland,ltgo.dtdlntochlllengtng Cheater tota duel to the deeth.

~loui!IIAHTBoll~epre•­

•

Pear Sweetheart, l'JJl glad you are
Thank you for · enjoying ~trip.
)OOr nice letter. i
I ·'

I.

'

10,00 (J)

..
Stay well. Write
again If you have

time, Love, Snoopy

P. s. Don't break

any lea·sh lo,ws_.

•'on. midlltl d'rtela, job burnout, It ·
catchta up with Oriacoll, thl
Trlbunt 1a hard drinking pallet
reporter, who tries a draatlc way
CMII. (110 mlno~
(()IDOl 01'
VAL Filmed In
Brull, Enal no end lndlt, thlt
clo&lt;:umma'J ..a,.lnn lh• prob·
..,., ot dal., ........ , raced by 111e

...... m~
vael )

ol mankind .

= --

~

,

IPSOE

I KJ

. rJ

PR'OiECTION WHEN
A~OUiiO DO
" DIR'TY WORK."

1

IMIENER I
(J I [J
Printanswerhere : [

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

l XXXX XI )
(Answers 1omorrow)

Sa turday 's

Jumbles : RAINY GIANT ASSURE CO UGAR

I Answer :

Wha1 the lady cop 's look s were -

ARRESTING
Jumble Book No. 15; containing 110 puzzles, is available lor $1.75 poatp1kl
from Jumble, cJo this newspaper, BoK 3-4, Norwood, N.J. 07648. lllCiude your
name, addreu, zip code and make chicks payable to Newspapefbook.a.

BRIDGE
Game neatly squeaked out
8y Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

NORTH

+Q 10 2

Oswald: "On a good day
South would make live no
trump . The heart and club
queens would be placed where
South wanted them and the
queen of diamonds would drop
when he played dummy 's aceking."
Alan: "As you can see this
was the worst possible sort of
day . A heart was led and
dummy 's ten fell to East's
queen. Back came a club and
that ten also lost to a queen. A
heart from West look care of
dummy 's jack 'as East pro1uced the ace and a second
cl ub went to West's ace after
declarer put up his jack. The
ei ght of cl ubs was led next
and South 's king gave him hi s
first trick."
Oswald "South cashed
dummy 's ace -king of
diamonds. The queen failed to
drop so South look three
rounds of spades, being careful to win the third spade with
dumm y's queen. Then he
played dummy's king of
hearts and di scard ed a
diamond."
Alan: "South had played the
6-5 ·4 of clubs from dummy on
the first three leads of the
suit . Now he led dummv 's
three sp&lt;JI and all of a sudden
East had a problem. Was

• KJ 10 2

+ AK
+6&gt;43

EAST

WEST

+9 6' 3

•a;

+874
.AQ 965
• Q 6'
+97

• 10 7 3 2
+AQ8

SOUTH

+AKJ

• 73
• J98 4
+ K J 10 2

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Wttl

Norlb

Eaot

Soolb

Pass
Pass
Pass

••

Pass
Pass

Pass

3 NT

.
••
I NT
•

•
•

••
•
,'
'

Opening lead:•s

I

declarer 's

lasl club the

deuce?''

~lftae

f

(

Oswald: "East couldn't be ;
sure. Finall y, he went wrong •
and hung on to his queen of :
diamonds to guard against 1
decla rer's jack. When dedar- !
er produced that missing '
deuce, he made the contract :

Irick with another deuce, the '
deuce of hearts.'"

:

6S£'oiMI ~ t sf

,.
by THOMAS JOSE'H
ACROSS
411 Capital
I Oscar
of China 's
Madison , Ill
Shensi
Felix Ungar
Province
5 Parkway
41 Shelter
9 Letter
4Z Hither
sign-&lt;Jff
DOWN
tO Buy into
1Swrunerville
13 The same
2 Calif. city
'.
Yetilerday's Answer
(Lat.)
3 Ended
. 14 Las Vegas
4 Pulpit
16 Nearly
27 Leave
employee
5 Enigma
20 Flamenco
Z9 Maestro's
6 "Paper
15 Cannen
dancer's item item
of to's filma
Moon " star . 21 Golf score 32 Ogden 17 Nigerian
7 Bunna's
22 Auto
33 Pa . city
;
city
old name
23 Food
34 Take the ' ·
18 Indisposed 8Ernlssary
%4 Spellbinder
lead
19 Actress,
11 Unruffled
25 Cham!&gt;35 Rational
Rital.Z Quiver
erlain
37 - atque vale!
ze Imprison
2% Roman
statesman
23 Jazz great,
Max 25 Dilute

...

....,.

2C Gaelic
27 Dreadful
· 28 Paulsen
Z9 Barbara
- Geddes

380ne time
31 Quickness
of apprehension
31 Musical
work
311 Greek river
311 - Howard

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work itt
It

AXYDLBAAXR.
LONGFELLOW

'
•

One letter simply stands for another. In this aample A ill
.used for 1he three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letlerl.
apo1trophe1, the length and formation of the word1 are ell
hints. Etch day the code letters are dift'erent.
'
CIYn&lt;l:QUOTES

XAXPGXO

KUJD

FVIFKO

GM

ZFDRXD

MU

KUJD

OGVXAYX .

DUK

HGAit

FAO!Xb

v.

..

OPGM~
.....,,

ITISIK&gt;METIMESTHE MAN "nu ·
OPENS 'l1IE DOOR WHO IS THE LAST ro ENTER 'l'HJil
(110 .J~ROOII~~--li!I~~Jf.~;+:B!:::t~'II~A.~BIBI!)800=:::::________

10:11~
Cill UfiDATIIIIWI
.
1040· 11110i11AII IIIIAIIIIOUNCID
IIIWI

.......,,_
.,...... .-....... ... . .

meet the

Browns: Paddington's be.st friend,

cAPTAIN EASY
PUT OOWN

~e

·

Y111 W7'1 Clntec:Tte:

.+,.

AverageUfe .
An ortlll' tne 11u 111 awnae Ploduttl'" life e~
about • ,.an and can bMr l,IGO oranc- or more at
~.

.

•

�-

----

'
Pag-1G-The Dail

Sentinel

Pomeroy

Middle

hio

Monday, Apri113,1981

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
Public Notoce

Decedent:

BASIC UTILITY
SCHEDULES
Water Fund

Balance, Jan 1,

1980

- Servoce
19.295 1~
- Hyd Rental 51 / Ltg
etc
762.50
""'£_'" - MISe Sales
247 35

Nottce •s hereby gtven

lhal on the 26th day of Mar
ch, 1981, the Wood County
Bank, Executor of the
Estate of Nancy Reed
deceased, late of the Ctly ol
Parkersburg, County of
Wood, and Slate of West

- Taps, PermrtsandCon-

necloons
Total
RecetP.IS

ftled m thts Court
an authenttcated copy of

lhe letters of lhetr appt nt
ment granted to them by
the County CommtSSton of
wood
County,
West

Ytrgm ta All credttors of
such decedent must file
1hetr clatms to thts Court
wlthtn StX months after the
date of such fllmg, or thetr
Clatms will be forever
barred as a posstble lten

upon the Ohio real estate of
suCil decedent
Robert E Buck
Judge
(Jl 30, (4) 6, 13, 3tc

+=========~~~:;===:;;;~
Executn x of the Estate of
Mary R rggs, Deceased •

CASE NO

Publtc Notoce
to
iri ·,·est&gt;On.~i to
I not
against

March 27, 1981

Contract Sales

Legat Copy No.

81 ·244
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
Sealed proposals wtll be
recetved at the off tee of the

Dtrector of the Ohto Depar
tment of Transportation,
Columbus, OhiO, untrl 10 00
AM , Oh ro Standard Trme,

Tuesday , Apr l 21, 1981, for

rmprovements m ·
Mergs County, Ohro, on

MEG S R 124 (31 09 52 07)
- State Route 124, by spot

resurfacrng wrth asphalt
concrete
Pavement Wrdth
Vanes
ProJect and Work Length
- 45,778 f ee t or 8 67 m•les
"The da te set tor com
plet ron of thrs work shall be
as set forth rn the b•ddmg
proposal
Each b•dde r shal l be
requ rred to frle wrth hrs brd
a certrf red ch eck or
cashrer's check • tor an
amount equal to . frve per
cent of h1s brd, but m no
event more than f ifth
thou sand dollars, or a bond
tor ten per cent of h1s brd,
payab'e to the D~rector
Brdders must apply , an
the proper forms, for
qualrfrcation at least ten
days prror to the date set
j or penrng brds rn ac

on
of race,
color1 or nat·ional ongrn rn
constder
for
an
award
" Mmtmum wage rates
for th•s pro1ect have been
predetermmed as required
by law and ere set forth In

the btd proposal "

"The date set for com

pletton of lhts work shall be
set forth tn the btdd,ng

prop:.sal "

Each

all btds

DAVID L WEIR
DIRECTOR

Rev 8 17 73

Pubhc Not•ce

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARING
The Village of Pomeroy
Will hold the fi rs t com
mun1ty wide heanng of a
senes of two hearings con
cerning a Communrty

Development Block Grant
fonal application on Wed
nesday, Apn/ 15~ 1981 , 7 30
PM at the ~tty Hall,

Pomeroy, Ot'lto At thrs
meetrng crtrzen rnput
regardmg the use of funds
Will be sol•crted
For further tnformat.on

contact the Mayor's Off tee

Clarence Andrews
Mayor

Vtllageof

Pomeroy, Oh1o
1~113,

lie

Publh: Notice
NOTICE OF BIDS
Separate sealed bids
shall be received by c lerK
of Col umbra Townshtp until
' 6 PM Aprtl 30, 1981 DST
and the btds Wtll be opened
and read May 2, 1981 8 PM
at the township bu tldong for
the following equ •pment
1,000 ft 2112" ftre hose
30ft 11h" fire hose
2'12' ' combtnation nozzle
Ph" comb1nat1on
2 -

nozzles

2'12" to ll!2" gated wye
?
Co2 frre ex ·
trnguishers, dry chemtca l

Porfable booster pump
2
self
contained

breathrng apparatus

2 extra
tanks
11

2'1:2 floating stramer

13 coats and pants

20ft 21h " suction hose

2 Rechargeable hand Ian

terns

1 Charger
All of above must be woth
American
standard
threads
Trustees

reserve

the

right to re1ect any or all
)&gt;Ids.
Put the words "Ftre
Equipment" on outsode of
envelope contalntng bid
. Board of Trustees of
, Columbta Twp.
,
G lor/a Hutton,
Clerk
Rt 3 Box82
Albany, Ohio 45710
Phone614·
698·6204
(~) 13, lie
Public Nottce
NOTICE OF BIDS
· Separate, sealed bids
shall be received bY clerk
01 Columbia Yownship,
Mejgs County until 6 P.M.
DST April 30, 1981 and the
bids will be opened and
read May 2, 1981 at 8 P.M
at the township bulldjn
BidS Will be receiv for .
the following .
A building and a
age
located near the central
part of the township
suitable for a lire depart·
rnenl
Please list approximate
size of building, amount of
acres, and the location on
the bid.
Put the words "Building
Bid" on the outside of en
vel ope.
Trustees reserve the
right to reject any or all
bl~s.

Board of Trustees of
Columbia Township
Gloria Hulton,
Clerk
Rl. 3, Box82
Albany, OH -45710
(~J

13, lie

btdder

shall be

requ~red to file wrth htS btd
a cert rfred check or
cash•er's check for an
amount equa l to ftve per
cent of his btd, but m no
event more than fifty
thousand dollars, or a bond
for ten per cent of h1s brd,
payable to the Dr rector
Btdders must apply, on
the proper forms , for
quallf rcation at least ten
days prtor to the date set
for openm~ btds rn ac
cordance With Chapter 5525
Ohto Revrsed Code
Plans and specrftcattons
are
f1le '" the Depart
Transportat ton and
ot the D• s1nct

23290 Ftnal

Acc ount of Mrnn re Wooten ,
Admmrstratrrx of the
Esta te
of
A nd e rson
Wooten, Deceased

CASE NO 22861 F trSI Ac

count of Joseph A Young,
Guard1an of the Estate of
Orenda Cunnrngham, a
mrnor
Un less exceptrons are
f1l ed thereto, sard acc ounts
will be for heanng before
sa1d Court on the 23th day

of Ma y, 1981, al wh tch ttme

satd accounts wrll be con
Sldered and cont.nued from

day to da y unt tl ftnally

drsposed of
Any person mrerested
may frl e wntten exce pt. ons
to sard accounts or to mat
ters perta1nrng to the
executron of the trust, not
less than f1Ve days pr• or to
t he date set for heanng.

Robert E Buc k
JUDG E
COMMON PLEAS CO URT,
PROBATE DIVI SION ,
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
(4) 13, ltc

Public Notrce

34,734 94

Columbus, Ohto, unli/10 00
AM , Ohoo Standard T1me,
Tuesday, May 5, 1981. for
tnnprovernents 1n

Gall la and Meigs Coun
ltes, Ohio, on GAL S R. 160
(0 53) - State Route 160,
and MEG S R 7- (0 00
I 67) - State _Route 7, by

resurfacmg
concrete

Pavement

Varies

w1th

asphalt

Wtdlh

-

Protect and Work Length
- 23,919 feel or 4 53 m tles
The OhtO Department of
Transportation

here by

nottftes all btdders that ot

Wtll aff 1rmatrve ly rnsure
that rn any contract en
tered mto pursuant to fhts
advert tsement, m•norlty
busrnessenterprr ses will be

Revolvrng

Funds

Tur st and Agency

Funds
2,1 13 53
Grand Total
12,991 16
MUNICIPAL
RECEIPTS BY
SOURCE

Revenue
Prope ty Taxes
RE &amp; PU Property

Tax

8,672 64

Properl y Ta&lt;

1,638 17

Int angible (C iass lfred)

Tax

2,595 86

Total Prope rty Ta xes

(G ross)

15,0&lt;7 12

Oth er
Locally Lev 1ed
Taxes
County Motor Vehtc le
Tax
4 976 18
Total Other Loca l
Taxes
4 976 18
Sta t e Lev1ed
Locally
Shared Ta xes
Local Governm en t
Fund, Sal es

Fees

Fees

2, 488 43

5l

..... ' . ' .

11 ,54&lt; 12

Disposal

3, 913

Waterworks and

3,000 00
2. 11 3 53

5 11 3 53

so

Suppl y
Cemetery

20,60&lt; 99
I, 1&lt;2 04

Sewage

29.700 00

Total Pu bl•c Servtce

Cha rg es

80,951 73

F1nes, Costs and For
fertu res
Court Fmes and
Forfe rtur es
2.583 00
To tal F 1nes,
Costs and
For te.tures
2,S83 00
Other Revenue

Sale of Assets

1,000 00

Source Total s Summary

P ro pert y Taxes

15,047 12

Other L oca ll y Lev red

Taxes

4,976 18

State Lev red Locally

Shared Ta&lt;es

Revenue
5h.:.rr na
Charges for Publ tc
Servtces
F1nes and Costs
Forfe1tures
St Ma1n and St
H1ghways

8,337 18
3 179 00
2U,604 "19

2 580 00
12,313 37

afforded full opportuntly to

submtt btds rn response to
thts mvitat10n and wtll not
be drsc rtmtnated aga1nst
on the grounds of race,
color, or natrona! anginal
m considerat1on of an
award
" Mm1mum wage rates

for thiS pro ject have been

predetermined as requrred
by Jaw and are set forth m

the btd proposa l "

" The date set for com

plelton of lhts work sha ll be
set forth In the btddlng
proposal "
Each bodder shall be
required to ftle wtlh hiS bid
a cert1fied check or
cashier's check for an
amount equel to five per

cent of his btd, but tn no
event more than fifty
thousand dollars, or a bond
for ten per cent of his bid,
payable to the Direc tor
Btdders must apply, on
the proper forms, for
qualtftcaflon at least ten
days prior to the date set
for opening btds In accordance wrth Chapter 5525
Ohio Revised COde
Plans and specifications
are on file tn the Depart·
ment of Transportation and
the office of the Dlstroct
Deputy Director
The Director reserves
the r ight to re ject any and
all btds
DAVIDL WEIR
DIRECTOR
Rev. 8 17 73
(4) 13, 20, 2tc
Publoc Notice
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT,
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF SET·
TLEMENT • OF AC ·
COUNTS,
PROBATE
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
Accounts and vouchers of
the following
named
fiduciaries have been flied
In the Probate Court, Meigs
County, Ohio, for approval
and setrle~nt,
CASE NO 22153 First
Current Account of Marvin
Kelly, Guardian of the
Guardianship Eatate of
Florence McLaughlin, an
lncom(!Oteflt
CASE NO. 23183 Final
Account of Leo S. Curtis,
AdmlnlatrltJ&gt;r of the
Estate 01 Robert Scott
Cooper 1k1 Scoll Cooper,
Deceased
CASE NO. 22834 Final
Account ol Lols N. Burt,

4,200 00

Notes
2,719 32
Total
13,139 64
MEMORANDA
DATA

Assessed V aluatron,

2,577,435
10.10 M
41 80

Ra c tne. Oh10 March 29..

1981

I her eby certrfy the
foregorn g to be correct

Mae Cle land
VollageCierk/
Treasurer

Date - March 29 1981

Balance Plus
Recetpts

Tell Time!!!!! OUr new
spring and summer line rs
now ava1lable and is 1t un
believab le!!!! Grve us a
call for more information

12,380 63

Fund

1980
Tota l Exp Plus
Bal., Dec 31,
1980

II

as a young business person

and earn good money plus
some great gofls as a Sen
tmel route carrier
u~

Com

btnatlons, Bonded Call
New Haven, W.Va. 304 882

$185 00 to $SOO week ly dotng

Master

Service,

Keying,

ma11tng work
No ex
penence required
AP

12,380 63

Gasoline

PLY Ctrcle Sa les, P 0
Box 224 D, Rtchmond Hill,
NY 11418

Tax Fund

Balance, Jan 1,

1980

Recerpts

Gasoline Tax
Other
To1al Begonntng

RACINE Gun Club has
discontinued gun shoots un
til September.

419 71
16,800 oo
2,500 00

WANTED

Located

19,779 71

at

Jack

Rood

residence, Tuppers Plams,
Ohio Tues &amp; Thurs, hours
10 a m .-2 p m , 7 p m. 10

Expenditures

Total Exp Matnt.
7,161 08
Matnt
7,821 64
Grand Total Exp -

2354 or 742· 27 55
If you have sold lns ur ar e,

pm

sweepers, fuller brush, de
We can guarantee $1000 per

14.982 72

FINANCIAL
REPORT OF
TOWNSHIPS
For Ftscal Year
Endmg Dect1mber

31, 1980

and Trader

(Gross)

I certify the &lt;followmg
report to be correct

EdnaM Swtck

Township Clerk
Tel No 614·

Tang1ble Personal

Property Tas
I Gross)
Total Recetpls

Total Begrnn•ng

L tcense Ta x

Fund

Balance, Dec 31,

1,093 67

Fund

479 71

Roa d and Brrdge

Fund
1.409 23
Cemetery Fund
2,039 53
Cemete ry Bequest
Fund
2,950 26

Federal Revenue

1980
Total Exp Plus
Ba l , Dec 31,
1980

768 99
5,910.95

Genera l Fu nd

&lt;Gross)
15,455 65
Tang tble Personal
Prop Tax
11 ,286 .96 Sale of l.ots
Other
19,300 00 Total Receopts

M otor Veh1cle
L rcense Tax

F und

Gasolrne Tax

Fund
Road and Brtdge
Fu nd

Cemetery Fund
Ftr e Protec tron

Is

5,910
3,372 .06

Fund
2,932 39
Federal Reve nue
Shartng Fund
7,270 00
Total
65,528 01
Total Recetpls
and Balances
Genera l Fu nd
22,642 18
Motor Vehicle
Fund
Gasoline Tax
Fund
Cemeter y Fu nd

Cemetery Bequest

12,380 63
7,320 18
5,411 64
2,950 26

18
85
52

portuntly employer Please
marl resum es to Personnel
Manager, P 0
box 218 ,
New Haven, West Virginia

25265

12

.

Sotuatoons Wanled

WOMAN Seekong employmen t, Hosp tlal, Dr of

7,320.18

flee of Clinic as recep

ltonlst or Medt cal records
Any shirt or days. Know
medical
terminolog y
References 742· 2030

JJtLANDMARK
992-2181
E. Maon &gt;I.
Pomeroy

and Tra1ler

2S41l.OJ
·
384.38

REPA IR

Giveaway

or

HONEST

SPAYED female dog, ~-5
Balance Plus
years of age, part
Receopts
5,m
dachshund
Short
to
Expenditures
Would
Salaries
3,879 67 medium hatred
Suppltes
261 81 make a n tce pet 667 3267
Other Expenses
64.35
!Qtal Exp. • ,
4,20S 83
calance, Dec 31,
6 ' Lostand Found
1980
1,205.81
Total Exp. Plus
Found . Boy's Meigs Ht
Bal, Dec 31,
class ring . Must Identify
1980
5,411 64 Phone 1·304-773·5611.
Cemeterv Bequest
Fund

Balance, Jan 1,

1980

Receipts
Grants Federal
7,270.00
Total Receipts
1,21p.oo
Total Beginning
Balance Plus
1,72981
Receipts
7,964 71
1,205 81
E xpendlturos
Maintenance and
2,950.26
Operotlon
2,211 .45
Supplies
Other Expenses
4,525 61
Total Exp.
6,737.06
'Bal..pec. 31,
1911U
1,227.71
Total Exp. Plus
Bal., Dec 31,
1980
1,964.77

REDUCE safe &amp; last with
GoBese Tablets &amp; E·Vap
"water pills" r.elson Drug

with Stck or elderly 992
2055.
In

need

of

perl e n ced

.vork

Ex

sk tdder

operator,
bu lld o zer
operator and truck dr iver
Cal/992·5776 or 992·3288 •
Will care lor elderly In our
home Man, woman, or
couple. Tra ined and ex·
perlenced. 992·7314

7

Have room and board and
laundry fro elderly in m y

YardSa/e

yard sale, April 10
&amp; 11. 9· 4:40. Rustic Hill,
Syracuse. Clothes, kitchen
Items, baby Items, outdoor
furniture,
dishwasher,
cabinets, mise Rain can·
eels.
Yard Sale. l&amp;t right In
Syracuse on College Rd.
Wednesday, Thursday,
Friday. 9·5.
Large yard sale; April 11 &amp;
12 at Mrs. Don Brewer's In
Reedsville, Ohio on Rt. 12~
9·6 · 30 each day of
YARD SALE . Henry Hartresidence, Chester,
New Hope ~d . April
1~.
&amp; 16. 9·._ Clothes,
Avon bo"les, twin shMts,
spre1d I. aham, like new. If
rain, garage sale.
Now buying gold and
sliver, old POCket watches,
chelns, diamonds, sliver
money and coins. Martin's
G8Nr11 Store, Middleport.

992-6370.

13

Insurance

AUTOMOBIL E
IN ·
SURANCE been can
celled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone
992·2143.
11

Wanted to Do

Furnace repaiTS, electrical
work, plumbing, mobile
home or residence 992·

5858.

Will do all types of carpenter work Experienced
anct responsible No idb to
big or 1to small Phone 992·
3941 anytime.

F A.

furnace,

porch,

garage and level lot for
only S/8,500.
NEW LISTING Beautiful , river front
location ~ nice size
bedrooms, 2 lull baths,
modern birch kitchen,
dining, 2 patios, and
glassed·ln porch . Large
maples for summjr
comfort In Cheshire.
NEW LISTING-~ or 5
bedroom fa1tll/y brl~k
home. 1112 baths, new
gas F .A. furnace and
central afr. All large
rooms except one, 5 gas
fireplaces,
flowers,
shrubbery and garage
nearshopplng.
7 ACRES - MineralS
with .gas well for your
own use. Small one
bedroom home, leading
'treek water and hen
house. wan!S11,500.
NEW LISTING 3
BR's, Jlh baths, gas
heat, city utilities, 2 por
ches &amp; level lot In Mid·
dleport for S16,500
NICE HOME - 1~ vrs.
old, all on one floor, oak
floors, fireplace In lamoly room and one In the
full basement Garage
and 3 lots. All city
utilities, 2 bedrooms
near shopping.
1.66 ACRES - Ideal lor
house or mobile home.
Drilled well, septic
tank, and electric are
there. Ready to move on
and set up. Only S6.SOO.

Housinq
Headquarters

Get Ahead!

l,_,l_ _,H_,o~m~e;!sC!I~orc.:S".!a~le!....._
•
or three bedrO(Im
on oocre In Pomero,..
deck, gardener's
N,OOO. Also, 2 and
acres 11\•t would
building silo,
yet In town
Call 992·6279 or 992

Six room farmhouse wl/h
bath ana double garage on
acre and one hall of
Jround.' Located on Rt. 1 al
lVI i"olnls. $41,500,00 ,
Also In ICrllnd one hill of
ground located near the
fairgrounds, $4000.00. 992·

2571

949·2862
949 2160

'

2 41fc

Mobile Homes
for Rent

61

ALL STEEL

ROOFING

farm s~~:lilings
"From JOxJO"
SMALL

"SpecialiZing In
Re- Rooling"
sm~ll Carpenter 4obs
Darrell Brewer

•

ANN'S CAKE
DECORATING
SUPPLIES

utility Buildings
Sozes from 4x6to 1:!1140

P~:~i~~!82

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rl. 3, Box 54
Racone, Oh
Ph. 614·843-2591
6 15 tfc

m -7861
3 11 1 mo pd

Osborn Rd.
ReE!d5''111e, Oh.

' , , ,.,._

,

.

Effective 4·6·81
MON . thru SAT.
9to5
Closed Thursday
4-91 mo pd.

~========::jrr========;i;:=======::;
SALE

- .. _..... .. . .
--····-'.
__
-... ..... .......
. .. .. ..
Farm Equipment

Kuker -400 gal . spray; Int.
540, ~X16" plows; M.F. 13.5'

ARD
AVATORS

Disc., fert. !uger; 1 set

MOBILE HOME lor rent.
Completely
furn ished .
Adults preferred. Deposit.

snap on 15.5x38 dual tires,
N.H. 367 Manure Spreder ;
Dunham 14' Harogator ;
lnt tractor, 986 304-675·
2245

New Homes - ex-,
tensive remodeling
• E lec.rica I work
• Roofing work
· , J2Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583
324·1mo. '

992·27~9

USed R- ~ Ditch Witch
Trencher 1-614-69~ ·7842 .

32

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65,
three bedlooms, new car·
pet. 1971 Cameron, 1~ x 64,
lv&lt;IP bedrooms, new carpet.
1'1"/2 Champion, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, new carpet. 1976
Cameron, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, all electric. lt71
Skyline, 12sx 6). two
bedrooms, bath &amp; '1:!, new
carpet. 1970 PMC,
12 x 60, two bedrooms, new
carpet B x S Sales, Inc ..
2nd x VIand Street, Point
Pleasant, WV Phone 675-

4424.

~acres with 70xU trailer, 2
car garage 20x27 . 3 miles
from Racine on Co. Rd. 28.
Call after 5 p m. 949 2618.

Mobile home,
bedroom 992·7479

three

New 1981
Models
All new Hallmark
Homes starting at
$10,983 for 14' wide,
2 BR.

HOME SAlES
INC.

NEW LISTIN!f- Level
lot and located on a good
street In Syracuse. Nice
living room, 1equipped
kitchen, 3 bedrooms,
and a large garage wl/h
work area. $43,000.00.
NEW LISTING In
Middleport This 2 story
frame had a lot of work
done and Is real cute. II
has 6 rooms, 3 bed·
rooms,

woodburnlng

fireplace and a small
storage bldg S18,500.00.
AN ACRE IN TOWNAnd a 12x6.5 Holly Park
Mobile Home with central air cond , some fur·
nlture

Four 15,000 gallon tanks
located abOve ground at
Athens, Ohio $3,000 00
each . Phone 1·30-4-422 2781.

44

Apartment
tor Rent

... .....
.. . . ···-· ...... ...
..._

Two bedroom furnished
apartment 992- ~ or I ·
304-882·2566.
71
Two bedroom apartment,
furnished, utilities paid .
Also two bedroom mobile
home ~ one child accepted
John Sheets, 3 and one half
miles south of Middleport
on Rt. 7

,

All Models
Ava1lable

LEO MORRIS
Rt 1 Stde Holl Rd
Ru11and 0~
2 9 lfc

~.._~

.

KeepThll Aellor Future Reterenu

Autos for Sale

1981 Chevelle. 2 door, 4
speed, red , 5,000 miles. 30·
:U mpg. $4,600 992· 570~
1971 Chrysler, all electric
with new tires
Runs
good .. $350.00. 742·2139.

MILlER EL£CTRIC APPLIANCE SERVICE C&amp;AAU10 REPAIR'
Call Ken Young
SERVICE
For all of your Wiring needs.
Lei George Moiler check
your present elec1rtcal

system.
Restdentlal
&amp; Commerc1al

Woodburner,

45
Furnished Rooms
and lsln excellent condl
lion. S16.5oo.oo.
Sleeping rooms; by the
CLOSE TO TOWN - A week . Kitchen, and
small 3 room home with televiSion lounge. C~rryout
a large 32x30 garage store and restaurant within
and 1'12 acres. · Home 500 feet. 992·6370.
dOeS need to be finished.
$19,000.00.
Private sleeping rooms,
ONE FLOOR - Plus a with
cooking facilities, air
full basement makes
this 9 room, 2 bath home conditioning and cable tv .
nice 11 has 4 bedrooms, 773·5651.
kitchen, dining, living,
Sp41cotor Rent
family and T.V. room. 46
Allo there Is a garage
and workshop In the COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North 01
basement $45,000.00.
WE HAVE OVER 10 Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
PROPERTIES
TO 992 - 7~79
CHOOSE FROM. STOP ' - - - - - - - BY AND LET US SHOW TRAILER spaces for rent.
THEM TO YOU.
Southern Valley Mobile
REALTOR
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh.
Henry E. Cleland, Jr,
992 -39~
"Hlt1
-------ASSOCIATES
Campsites lor rent on
JNn TruaNII t4t-2UO
scenic riverbank Utilities
RCIIIr &amp; Dollil Turner
paid. Small trailers only.
"2-5692
Phone m-5651.
OFFICE ft2-225t
Mobile home lot lor rent.
Utilities paid. John Sheets,
3 and 1·2 miles south 01
MlddleportonRI.7 .

110 E. M•ln St,

~qm•roy, Ohio
' f92-70J4

SNAPPER SALE·A·RAMA
HAND-PROPELLED MOWERS
LIST
9" 3 H.P. 2 Cycle Side Chute
19" 3 H.P. 2 Cycle w/bag
3112 H.P. 4 Cycle Side Chute
21" 3'h H. P. 4 Cycle w/bag

$231.00
$250.00
$253.00
$275.00

3112 H.P. 4 Cycle Side Chute
3112 H. P. 4' Cycle w/bag
3112 H.P. 4 Cycle w/blg (elec. start)
I" 5 H.P. 4 Cycle w/bag ( H.D. comm,)

-------,II

ROGER HYSEll'S
GARAGE

GOINGBALD1

Rheem, Amana
&amp; Carner

Cant help you

TIRES GOING BALD'

Hrs. Mon ·Fn.
9 A.M.-5. 30 P M

French City Painting .
ReSidential, commercial, ,
Interior,
exterior .
Specializing In Interior

GAU.IA
REFRIGERATION
INC.

I

-Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair

AIR CONDITIONERS
&amp; HEAT PUMPS
Ph. 614-992 7038

We havt F'uutone 72lsand wt
can hell)

POMEROY HOME lo AUTO

992· 5682

3 II 1 mo

2 23 I mo

10 7 ttc

painting, ~aper hanging &amp; ~========~lr==;;;;==it~=:;;::;;;.~;::~
~~,'::,~~s ~~~-~~· o/3:7elo
"YOUNGS
J&amp;L BIIMN7160

MOBILE
HOME
PARTS
'

Window Cranks
MODIII H&lt;ome Roof
coaling
Mobllo Home Doors
Mobile Home Anthors
Sets
Mobile
MoDllt Home
Homo Lock
Awnings

REESE ~
111'1..1 G
TREI1W11N
SERVICE
water· SeVtter·E 1ectr1c
Gas l•ne-DJtches
Water Ltne Hook·ups
SeptiC Tanks
county Cert•hed
Roush lane

INSUlATION

CARPENT_ER
SERVICES"

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

- Addoosand
remodeling
- Rooftng and ;uHer
work
-Concrete work

e1nsulat1on
• Storm Doors
• Storm Wrndows
• Replacement

-Piumblngand

Wondows

electrrcal work

&lt;Free Estomatesl

James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772
3·23 I mo

m -6215 or192-7314
PIHIIeroy, Oh.

.ll~~~~~~~~~j~::;;::::::::;~;:~=~~=~~;
J&amp;C

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

SALE
$199.95
$219.95
$229.95
$249.95

KINGSBURY HOME
SAl£S PARTS &amp;
ACCESSORIES
Minersville, Ohio
m-5517

LIST

SALE

$363.00
$385.00
$467.00
S531.00

$329.95
$349.95
$429.95
$499.95

t

Free Estima e

V.C. YOUNG II

Cheshire, Oh .
Ph, 367·7560

Homo

SELF-PROPEWD MOWERS

SAN ITAnON
SERVICE

BISSEll
SIDING CO...

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

" Beautiful, Custom
Built Gar1ges"

Call for lree sodlng
estimates, 949·2101 or
949-2160.
No Sunday Calls
3·11-lfc

TERMITE ami

RIDIIS

AL'fERATIONS &amp; general
sewing, experienced, work
guaranteed. M. Meier 992·

5983.

Ph. Pomeroy
614-992-7038
3·11 -lmo

20%.-30%
AU.DI'nNG
CAJ(E
DECOM
SUPPUES

NEW LISTING
MOdern 3 or ~ bedroom
home, bath, natural gas
F .A furnace. Natural
wood cabinets In kit·
chen, full basement,
llldlng glass door to
front porch and nice lot
Only $37,500.
REAL BUY - 2 or 3
bedroom frame home
with bath, large klt.dlen,
lots of varnished Wood
cabinets. Natural v•s

NEW SlORE

Free Esttmates
Reasonable Pr1ces
Call Howard

B43-4S7s.

home. S250 00 per month
'191·6022.

~family

and Residential

sahr.
MAYTAG wringer washer.

Phone
H614l-992,3325

resp ec table

Practrcal Nurse w ill stay

repa~r gutters
and downspouts, gutter
c1ean1ng and pa1ntmg
All work guaranteed .~

• Electric Heating
&amp; Wtrong
lndustr•al , commerc1a1

Misc. Merchlnlse

FARMALL B side mount
mower. $750. 985-~240, 3
miles north Chester. VIctor

remodeling

Balance, Dec 31,

694.77

REALTY

work, f Ioars, doors, wall

Total Beginning

1980

54

paneltng, ce tling, or floor
tole, siding 992 2759
4

Balance, Jan l,

16

I pat d for by the com
pany We are an equa l op

1,729 81

1980
F 1r e Protect ion
Fore Protection
Fund
2,932 39
Fund
Federal Revenue
Receipts
Sharong Fund
7,964 77 General Properly
Total
81 ,381 .76
Tax- Real Estate
Expendotures
and Trailer
General Fund
16,891.45
&lt;Gross)
2,549 01
Motor Vehicle
Tangible Personal
Ltcense Tax
Property Tax
Fund
8,085 .87
!Gross)
38~ . 38
Motor Vehicle
Totai .Rece/pts
2,932 39
L 1cense Tax
Total Beginning
Fund
14,982 12
Bala1}!:e Plus
Road and Brtdge
Receipts
2,932.39
Fund
5,590.37
Expenditures
Contracts
2.869.04
4 , 2~ 83
Other Expenses
63.35
Total Exp
2,932.39
Total Exp. Plus
Bal., Dec. 31,
1980
2.932.39
Federal Revenue
Sharing Fund

4 , 29~

No

very liberal fringe beneftfs

$sr

37

ME . degree Three to

~=~~~~,e~t~ert7~~e;;,~rr~ p~~s

20 INCH
PUSH
MOWER

Receopts
General Property
Tax- Real Estate

694 77
15,853 75

th e followrng
open
M ain
tenance Su perv lsor B E E

Metallurg tcal Degree

Cemetery Fund
Balance, Jan I,
I, 1980
2,039 58

Sharong Fund
Total

Total Rece1pts

AT POMEROY
LANDMARK

5,141 96

Balance Plus
742 6872
SUMMARY OF
Recetpts
7,320
Expenditures
CASH BALANCES,
Total Exp RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES
Mosc
342
Balance
Matnl
5,247
Jan. 1, 1980
Grand To!al Exp Ge neral Fund
s 7.186 53 Road and Brtdge
Motor Veh• cle
Fund
5,590

We have
PO SitiOns

f1ve years experrence as
Maintenance Supervisor
Productron Foreman·Che
m1ca1
Degree
or

Tax- Real Estate

Meogs County
Rutland, Ohoo
March 27, 1981

month tf you q ua ltf y Call
992·7440 between 2 p m and
6p m

or

General Property

Rutland Township

Gasolrne Tax

STOBARTS Greenhouse IS
now opened. It tS located on
Racine Rl. 2, C. R 11)().
Hanging baskets &amp; beddtng
plants Vegetables &amp; plants
of all ktnds.

1980
4,196 99
Tota l Exp Plus
Ba l, Dec 31,
1980
19,779,71
Road and Brtdge
Balance, Jan 1,
1980
I ,409 23
Receopts

People to sell

Avon
Work your own
hours P~rt t1me or full
lim. If tnterested call 742·

S &amp; S Ceramics now open

Balance Plus

Receip1s

Phone

nght away and get on
the eligibility list at 992
2156 or 992 2157

LOCKSMITH

4,294 76

Help Wanted

GET VALUABLE tralntng

abOut this tnterestong work
Phone 992·39~1 from 9 6

8,085.87

Balance, Dec 31,

Balance, Dec 31,
Publtc Not1ce

Fund

IT'S BEELINE'S Show and

L•cense Tax

Fund

License Tax

3, 179 00
I ,300 00

11,286.96
11,286 96

Gasoline Tax

(41 13. ltc

15 0&lt;7 12

1,093 67

Receipts
Motor Vehtcle

New, used, and antique fur
nllure No Item to large or
to small Will buy one piece
or ,complete households
Marton' s General Store at
992 6370

Racine Volunteer Fire
Department sponsors a
shot gun &amp; rifle match
every Sat. night 6:30 p m
at their building tn Bashan
Factory choke 12 guage
Shot guns only Open sights
22 rifle

Expenditures

6,220 32

1980
Ta&lt; Levy
Corp
Tota l

2082.

Balance, Jan. 1,

1980

RHI Estill- GaNrtl

BAILEY'S

new or

e Heat Pumps •

Ice boxes, Iars, antiques,

etc complete households.
Write M.D Miller, Rt: 4,
Pomeroy, OH 45769 Or
caii 992-7761J.

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING
A11 types ol rool work,

'ELECTRICAL 00.

IRON AND BRASS BE !;IS ·
Old furniture, desks, gp/d
nnos, jewelry , sll~er
dollars, sterltng, etc. Wood

YOUR
PIANO.
Too
valuable to neglecf, expert
tuning &amp; and repair Lane
Daniels, 742 2'151 or 992·

Total Exp Mt sc
3,356 40
Matnt
4,72'/47
Grand Total ExpMotor Vehtcle

Transpor GO

Other Ge ne ral
Bonds

(Gross)
56 25
Other
4,177.71
Total Receipts
15,455 65
Total Beginning
Balance Plus
Recetpts
22,642.18
Expenditures
Total ExpAdm.
16,891.45
Grand Total ExpGeneral Fund 16,891.45
Balance, Dec. 31,
1980
5,750.73
Total Exp. Plus
Bal , Dec . 31.
1980
22,642 18
Motor Vehocle
L•cense Tax
Fund

Total Beginnrng

12-31-81

Notes

RACINE GUN SHOOT,
Racine Gun Club, every
Friday mght starling at
7 30 p m Factory choke
guns only

3,786 75

C1garette License
FeesandFtnes

Total Rece ipts
1,400 00

WANTED
TO BUY
GOLD,
SILVER,
PLATINUM, STERLING·
COINS, ~INGS,JEWEl.R •
Y, MISC. ITEMS. AB ·
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED. ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MI'DDLEPORT,
OHIO 992 ·3~ 76

Loca l 'Government

and Stale Income
Tax

Business Services

Anllc!uos

ATTENTION :
PORTANT TO
Cllh

Receipts
General Property
Tax-Real Estate
3
Ann001n~omenls
and Trailer
(Gross)
3,930.93 1 PAY highest prices
Tangible Personal
possible for gold and silver
Property Tax
coins, rings, jewelry, etc.
(Gross)
, •..,.1 Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Estate Tax
2,929.76 'Shop, Middleport
(Gross)

L•cense Tax

Cash and
Investments

131 25
5. 176 00
8,337 18

3,909 15

Retrrement
Funds

541 50

Garbage and Ref use
Collect •on and

Rot ar y Fund

5,600.00

Other General

Tang1ble Per sonal

St ree t M a 1nt

7,877 63

8,26!1 44

Redeemed
Dur.ng Year
Pr1n. Only

3,000 00

Intergo vernm ent a l A1d,
Grants and Contracts
Feder al Revenu e
Shar.n g
3,179 00
F ire Contracts
1.300 00
lnd1V1 dua l F 1r e
Co ntra c ts
700 00
Char ges For Pub l 1c Ser
vrces
General Govern ment

Contract Sales legal

TransporPrtn.
GO Only

13 65 Other General
935 24
Bonds
7,877 63
Debt

Total Share d
Taxed

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohoo
Aprt/ 3, 1981

tment of Transportation ,

Fund
Ftre Equop
Total

Tax

Public Not•ce

- Operatton and
Ma , nt
25,629 65
- Capital Improve
ments
8.000 00
Total Exp
34,163 65
Balance, Dec 31
1980
571 29
SCHEDULE OF
INDEBTEDNESS
AND DEBT
RETIREMENT
FUN OS
Outstandtng
Jan I, 1980

746 17

C1gare tt e
L1censes
Gaso lme Taxes

(41 13, 20, 21c

Copy No. 11· 280
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
RS-986(3)
F-1/60)
Sealed proposals wdl be
recetved at the office of the
Dtrector of the Ohto Depar

Federal Revenu e
Sharrng
Antr Rec ess ron

Tax

DAVID C WEIR
Dl RECTOR
Rev 8 17 73

534 00

Notes
Fu nd
2,147 97 Other General
Slate Ht g hway Imp
Bonds
Fund
3,898 48 Other General
Cemetery Fund
300 57
Notes

Estate and lnher1tance

reserves
any and

cordance wtth Chapter 5525

Ohro Revrsed Code
Plans and specrfrcatrons
are on frl e 1n th e Depart
ment of Transportat1on and
the off•ce of the Drstnct
Deputy 0• rector
TOe D.rector reserves
the nght to re1ect any and

300 00

Expend1tures
- Personal
Ser v rces

Ytrgmta,

Columbus, OhtO

14,129 95

Rece1pts- From

satd

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
OEPARTMENTOF
TRANSPORTATION

,.,

-"' " ' .,, _, " " "'r

PROB-ATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
Estate of NANCY REEO,
Deceased
Case No. 23887
NOTICE

:ro all Crec:htors of

' '

~

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

'N'CARLYLE

2 Rolls
Rubber Bock

LIST

30"8 H.P. 4 Cycl,~ Celec. start)

51211.00
(Plus Free Haullnq Cart SII.OO Value)

LAWN

SALE
$1075.00

7.99 &amp; up

1

a GARDIN

Installed

LIST

SALE

1-164 H.P. w/48" Mower&amp; 48" Snow Blade

13911.00 $3299.00
1-16
H.P. w/Hydrostatlc, 41"I Mower $4247.00
.

$3599.00

PillE 91·2975

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp;SERVICE
IMCONDORIT.

FFom

From

12.95 &amp; up

1

Installed

PEST OONTROL

SHAG

Roache•,
Birds ,
Rodents, Spiders, Fleas
1Ants and other small In
1sect control.
FREE ESTIMATES
1 or 5 year tormllo

ROtJ. $15.95
$'199 SQ.

I.

Yd.

Cash-n·Carrv

Buy Now &amp; Save $2· $6 Per Yard.
25 rolls carpet in stock to pick from .
Regular backed.. carpet installed free,
With pad.
·
Drive A Little- Save A Lot

,,,.,.ntH

Located In Gallipolis
Ph,614_....11G1
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RUllAND FURNITURE

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742·2211

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Pag&amp;--12-: The Daily Sentinel

Monday, Apr1113,lp·1 _,
'

The Mi&lt;J.Obio Valley Amateur
RadiO . Club. WID bold scbool for
beginDerl in 1111ateur radio 011 April
14, at 7:30 p:m at the Muon County
Court HOUle IUIIIeX.

Radio school
. planned

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P..oai lllter..aed 1D lllllfeur
radio uellMted to altlad. '11111 club:
will bold ltl'rtplar meeHQI 1111 Mar.
1, .t the IUile laea~.

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Sotpplrmenl lu: Thr Pomeroy Senlln.-1

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ELBERFE~_DS
.

GROCER'S CANCER DAY- Vaughan's Cardlul,
Middleport, was a .beehive of activity Saturday wltb
youngsters dressed in clown sulls dlslribuling balloo111
on behaU olthe Cancer Society to cbildren. The Meigs
Unit ollhe American Cancer Society was also seUing

While q'*IHtletlast. Quantity eights reserved. We ore not re1pon•lbie fQr typographlcolerron .. S!lrrv no d.alers.
·

cer. Vaugban's CardiDal donated live pereent of Saturday's profits 1o lbe Meigs Vall. Pictured are, J.r, Holly
Miller, Amy Erwin, Don Vaughan, Mary O'Brien and
Joy O'Brien.

Blood pressure clinic
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PLASTIC EllS

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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Ablood pressure clinic will be held
by the Golden Age Club of Harrisonvile on Tuesday, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Your
Libraries

~

Now - i ust in time for E.aster
and Spring- big sale of our entire ~lock men's ·dress slacks.
Sizes 29 to 50 waist. You'll like
the selection of colors and
styles. ·

ballOODI, bated goods and offertng lnformatloa on caJI-

. SALE STARTS TODAY

.·Good Thru April 19, -1981

SPRING
SLACKS
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•Pill 'n Thrill
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20&amp;.

89° -NILSON'S 110.

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By Ellen Bell
increase means to you. If you get
Librarian
many books through interlibrary
Like almost every other in- loan, then let your congressmen
stitution and group in America know the effect this proposal will
today, your libraries are being af- have.
fected by the Reagan adLibrarians across the country
ministration budget requests. are fighting hard to save library
Some of these effects wiU hurt service. But my favorite fighting
you more than others.
librarian story comes from the
Linda Harlst, director of latest issue of American
OVAL, the library cooperative to Libraries, the magazine
which your libraries belong, has published by the American
pointed out the devastating effect Library Association. Lois Keller,
of a proposal postal rate increase the live feet eight and one-half infor libraries. Right now, if you ches tall, 7:J:year-old librarian for
are receiving Mail-A-Book, Edwardsburg, Michigan, was on
OVAL pays 21 cents for the first the way to work on a January afpound and eight cents for the ternoon when a man ran in front
second. If the administration gets of her car, forcing her to stop. He
its way, that first pound will cost jumped in the car and said he's
more than 50· cents. Since OVAL pay her to drive him 12 miles to
experienced State and Federal South Bend. Keller said she had
fund cutbacks this year, there is to open the library at 2 o'clock
absolutely no slack left in the and couldn't oblige.
OVAL budget - so Mail-A-Book
Suddenly there was a gun at
would probably have to stop her throat. So the feisty ll!dY
operating in late summer or fall librarian swerved her car into the
of this year. That means 80,000
path of another car, stopped,
people in a total of 10 counties wiU rolled down the window, and
loae a valuable library service.
yelled for help. The would-be abIncreases in the library rate 'lluctor ran but was later captured
may also have a profound impact by police.
.
on the ability of your libraries to
"The kids have term papers
borrow boks for you from other that are due," Keller said when
libraries. (That's called " in- the police asked her to come to
terlibrary loan" in library jargon headquarters. "They depend on
- or l.L.L.). Probably one-third me." So she opened up the library
of our interlibrary loans come by • and then asked a neighbor to submail. With such a large increase stitute for her while she went to
in postage - and cuts in funding headquarters to idenlily the 35all around the country - most
year-old suspect.
libraries will be unable to conSo much for the image of the littinue the service.
tle old lady librarian! (And if you
U,you are a Mail-A-Book user, think that the image lives on in
you might want to write
Meigs County, come pay us a
Representative Clarence Miller
visit. Your libraries have
or Senators Glenn and Metchanged a lot since Hector was a
zenbawn and tell them what the
pup. )

ave u

· Hours: Open Daily 91o B
un. 11

LOST
MALE satNAUZER, answets to name of Shultz,
dark grey.

The Need For More
Retirement Money
In these days of high living costs, Social
Security just isn't enough when you retire.
You'll need extra funds to get 'along comfortably. An INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNT (IRA) can provide those needed
funds, and at the same time it offers you a
tremendous tax break. Not only will the
money you save reduce your income tax, but
both it and the accumulated interest will not

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SYIUP

The IRA was created by the Pension Reform
Act and provides a generous tax · shelter for
those individuals not covered by a qualified
company pension plan, but who must provide for their own retirement through personal savings. You may contribute up to
15% of your earnings each year or $1,500,
whichever is. less (and up to $1,750 for you
and your non-working spouse).

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6 PACK

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NILSON'S 110.

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BANK ONE..

ov.,•.

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CHEF BOI·AR·DEE
RAVIOLI

1111 lh

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For complete dttalla of our IRA ~
gram, drop by any BANK ONE of·
flee~ We'll be glad to explain the ..,.
viet to you, and get you atartld with
a Wony·frtt plan for yaur mlrtmtnt

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OCEIISPRAY
CRAIIPPLE BABY JUICE
JUICE

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An Individual Retirement
Account Is The Answer .

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be taxed until you withdraw funds at retirement. In addition, you will probably then be
in a lower tax bracket.

~UPTIMI

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LUCK'S

PIITO lEOS

BANK ONE,.

lANK ONI 01' POMIM)Y NA

Pomtrot • ltuttand • TuPPtfl Plaine

Mlmb~r FDIC

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RABBIT

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REWARD
Please phone 992-2651 or 992·5627

'

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you can
Imagine
•11" Tall

ars.

Lost Sunday (llorning at Rock Springs in the Meigs High
School area.

.

•

every way

.

-'

JELLY EllS

•Benda

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

Ph,. 992-5776 Syracuse, Oh.
· NOW OPEN .FOR
SPRING SEASON
a PoHed Plants
• Complete line of bedding
plants and hanging
baskets.
All D111en Packs .9S.c doze

SPICED
I·

PTO to meet Monday
RVTLAND-The Rutland PTO
meeting will be beld at 7:30 p.m.
Monday at the Rutland Elementary
School. There will be a guest
speaker and refreslunents will be
served following the program.
Questions or information on the PTO
program may be directed to either
742-m or 742-2424.
On Friday evening at '1 p.m. the
Walt Disney movie, "Dead Knobs
and Broomsticks(' will be shown at
the school. Tickets are on sale at the
school.

LIIEI'S

'

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