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                  <text>.. I

Mid~leport

.. ·.

SWEET N LOW··
,.

'

. By' BOB HOEFLICH
. Ml~rt Ia eatmarlted to
more than S2,500,000 In
HouaiDg and Urban Deve!CipllleJt
luildl over the next three years
provided moneles are Bpplllpl 14ted
by the United Slates Congress.
'lbla W88 the report of Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman at Monday's
~gular session ·of Middleport
Village Counc!l.
The mayor said a pre-appH.ca~on
of Middleport Village for a block
grant fnm·.HUD tOtaling $712,000
has ~n aptjrov~ and the village Ia
to proceed with f1liDg the forinal application within the next .:; days. It
will be advised within 75 days after
the filing deadHne If the grant is approved. According to a communication from HUD, the agency

-~

rec:etre

MILlON's
no. aut
,'

HERSHEY'S
· f'OIL WUPPID .
IOLID MILK CHOCOLATI ·'

WTEREGGS
I Oz. lag

'181
NILION'SUO.

may get $2,500,000

'
haa $8t1,1100 allocajed for Middl~rt since that time. He suggested that
illlll82 and f93l,oop In IIIIa proVided .. tbe village try high pressure sodiUm
the monies are .appropriated by lights, which, he said, are
ef&lt;;OIIgl'l!lll. ·
feCtlve for atreet lighting In a towri
. Council higbly ~ed Mayor and it was agreed to h!lve the conr
Hoffman and . Kim Shields, the pany Install four such tights oo a
·tdwn's aid progn/m CODBultant, for trial basis.
their work In fillllg the current preIt wBll· also agreed to authorize ·
appHcation for the lf\JD block grant. Mayor Hoffman to enter into a conAfter a dlac:wJsloo, COWICi! agreed tfact with the company for street
topennltparklngforadlatanceof50 lights. Under the new contract with..
feet north of the WilHam Dern0$1tey the present Ughts, the charges ~ilfl'
residence on South Third St., now a be $209 more each month. Russell
oo-parklllg &amp;rei! and ~rd Byron pointed out that changes have been
Rusaell of the Columbus . and JIIBde and now all towns ~md cities
Southern Ohio ElectriC Co. discWlB paythesilmerateforstreetHghting,
atreetlightlngforthetown~
$4 a light now and $4.75 Wider the
R1118eU sai,d the village coniract new contract provided the mercury
for atreet lighting expired 1aat Sep-· vapor lights are continued In use.
tember and that the company bad
VOTESETINJUNE
continued charging at the old rate
Residents of Middleport will vote

more

on a three mill renewal levy In JWle. authorized to advertlae for bids on
One and one-half mills of the levy go the $78,500 Powell St. water liite profor paying for atreet lighting and the ject.
Mayor Hoffman annOWlC!!Ci that
ather mill and one-half go for street
no
bids were received on a lot owned
resurfacing.
Councll approved the March by the village at the corner of Garreport of Mayor Hoffman showing field and ~ Sts. The lot was
receipts of S6004 In fine&amp; and fees given to the town by the late Mary
during the molith. Aconununication Elizabeth Thomas and the village
from the Secretary of State was had several bida when it earUer
presented on ·the 1980 census COWl! advertiaed to sell the lot. However,
showing growth In the CO!!Ununlty. all the bida were rejected becaUBe
Recodification of village ordinances the bida, council felt, were too low.
The property waa readvertised and
by a Cleveland firm was approved.
Mayor Hoffman was authorized to no bids were received as a result of
apply to the State .of Ohio for a the second advertisement.
CoWlcllman Marvin Kelly repor$48,000 titter control grant and the
ted
that Hank Motley has requested
transfer of a C-3 Hquor penni\ from
an
alley
near Ilia property be closed.
Twin City Gateway Supennarltet to
It
was
agreed
that Motley receive
SureStoponNorthSecondAve., WBll
approved. Mayor Hoffman . was approval signatures from adjoining

.

property ownerll. The alley Ia pal'
tiaUy clOIIed now.
Council disc~ water drainage
problema at Coal and First Sts. but
took no action. The location will be
rechecked. Drainage problema on
Middleport Hill were dlacussed and
it was agreed to 88k the COWliY
engineer for a detailed plan on iJn.
provement of the situation. Councilman Allen King said Middleport
Hill as it is now is a "death trap".
Plans were made for paving some .
guttering on the hill when the street
resurfacing program is carried out
this year. At the requeat of King It
was agreed to place a reflective
arrow on First St., where the street
dead ends. Council dlacussed dogs
rWlning loose, a pigeon problem, a
(Continued on page 10)

11.ft

BRACH'S

•

CHOCOLATE COVERED
MARSHMALLOW
EGGS
\

at y . . . . . enttne

UWI FURNITURE
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C!.-

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The. Beimont Group
.

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. . . . , _ roll bot onipo In plooo "" ...... . tfldtt. 11M "' - ond.

'12''

NILION'I 110. 114.M

MOTORCYCLE POLICE
HELMn
CHIPSOMOTORCYCLE POLICE HElMET
Olflcltl CHIPS Pollee Mato,.ydt Htlintt. lila of
11ft · durtblt plaltic with tintld mCMtblt ~~~-.

CHAISE LOUISE
IITCHIII CHAIR

tdlu-. h..S btnd llld ""'" llrtp.

NRION'I 110. Q,M
Aval.lable
In yellow or

Brown

"HOW TO"
'
BOOK ASSORTMitfr
YOURCHOICI
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59°

•Oz.

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'8''

IIFUTABLE
RABBIT

THUMB SUCKING

'15''

BUNNY .

NIUON'I no. 117.M

NEWARK, Ohio - Firefighters are Investigating ia blaze that burned most of the Interior of the Taft Hotel, the last of Newark's old
hotels.
Fire Chief 'lbomaa Bader said Investigators will checlt out a report
that two men were seen rWlDing from the Wloccupied five-story
building shortly before the fire WBll reported Monday morning.
Firefighters, responding to a 2 a.m. call, found the rear of the hotel
burning. The blaze was extinguished within two hoUI'B.

Defense presents witnesses
CLEVELAND- The defense bas presented three!'*!~ In an ef-

fort to prove the Innocence of one suspended and two former Mansfield
policemen charged with beating three black p~ in 1977.
Harold Haaalnger, a Mansfield officer whose nose waa broken
·a confrontation with blacks on the dty'a nea• north side In 1977,

tl:..,==:~=~;:~::bad~ee~~twooftheaccuae,Jofflcersinviolent
·buthadnever-'tbernUieeaceUivefon:e.
Cincinnati, Akron top cities

CINCINNATI - &lt;lnclnnati and Akron have one thing In common
with the tihy arctic fiahlng village of Kotzebue, Ala.ska - they were
voted "All American" cities because their people care.
Cincinnati, with a population of 385,000, was selected for the role its
citizens' groups play in urban govenunent like the ~dget process and
ordinances lbnlting the displacement of the poor fo~ urban redevelop-

ment.

Akron, with about :181,000 residents, won for adoption of a new home
rule charter for Swrunit County and downtgwn revitalization and
renovation of the Akron Civic Theatre.

Yields back off slightly

'

15 Cents

A Multimedia Inc:: . Newspaper

Southern board hires staff

'3···

•Yellow

J Sections, 14 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleporl, Ohio, Tuesday, Aprill4,1981

NILION'IIIO. t!.ft

IOCIIII CHAIR

NILSON'S 110. ft,M

Voi.29,No. 252
Copyriphttd 1911

.I

99~

Thh papular e-P 11 mode with bright colon and · weothtt·ml&amp;tont wldt
polypropyltne wobblng. Pool front-leg&amp; footure a bright aluminum oxtru&amp;lon. Matching
color molded ormt. A favorite I
·

•

WASHINGTON - Yields on short-term Treasury securities have
backed off slightiy after rising more than 1'1~ pei'centage points last .
week.
Treasury bills maturing In 26 weeks sold at an average discoWlt rate
of 13.648 percent at Monday's auction compared ·with 13.783 percent
the previous week. The rate on 13-weelt blla was 13.783 percent, down
from 14.147 percent.
Beginning Tuesday, banks and thrift institutions may pay as muclr
as 13.1186 percent on $10,000, six-month certificates, which are lbnlted
to one fourth point above the 26-week Treasury rate.

Employment of personnel
hlghUghted Monday's meeting of the
Southern Local Board.of Education.
Teachers given one year contracts
were Sandra Cobb, Lee Lee and
Christy Powell; two year contracts,
Pamela Holcomb, Joseph Malesick,
Shirley Sayre; three year contracts,
.Daisy Franz, Janice Deem, Debora
Roush; five years, Michael Elberfeld, Jeanette Norrla, Debora Sayre.
Giveq contracts pending proper
certification were Donald Salmons,
two years; WilHam Hensler, two
years, and Linda Fisher, one year. A
one year contract for Paula Cochran
is subject to the approval of DDPF
lunda. 111e· board did not renew the

contract of one high school teacher,
Robert West.
Head teacher coniracts renewed
for one year were those of Lawrence
Wolfe and James WickUne and one
head teacher not reemployed was
WilUam Baer, Syracuse Elemen-

ce, drivers education instructor;
Lee Lee, variety show; Joe
Malesick, pep band; Carla Shuler,
DDPF coordinator; Joyce Thoren,
handicapped coordinator; WilUam
Hensler, head football coach and
either junior high or freslunan
basketball; Connie Enslen, girls
basketball and girls softball; Carl
Wolfe, head basketball coach and
athletic director; Hilton Wolfe, Jr.,
baseball; Suzanne Wolfe, volley
ball; Howard Caldwell, varsity
assisting basketball coach and
junior high football coach; James
Lawrence, junior high basketball
coach. The resignation of Sandra

tary.
Non-certified employes given contracts were Ike Spencer, bus driver,
two years; Ronnie Johnson, Linda
Grindley, con\inuing contraclll,
custodians. Extended service contracts went to llllrbara Bailey, Echo
advisor; Sandra Boothe, title IX
compliance officer; John Costanzo,
title I coordinator; James Lawren-

Cobb as cheerleader advisor was accepted.
Supplemental contracts for one
year went to Delbert Smith,
vocational education and noon kindergarten bus route; Larry Smith,
special education and noon kindergarten bus route.
The board reviewed and approved
the current special education plan
and recessed the meeting until a
later date which was not set.
Attending were all board members, Sue Grueser, Doo Smith,
Shirley Johnson, Dennie Evans and
Charles Pyles, Supt. Bob Ord and
Treasurer Nancy Carnahan.

Reagan won't compromise
WASHINGTON (AP) - t,·rom
President Reagan on down, officials
are singing a chorus of "no cuiupi'OIIli5es with Congress" on eleinel)ts of the adrniniltration'a pi'Oili'aJ!l
of tax and spending cuts.
. But at the same time, lh.l
president's spokesman is taking
care to avoid saying the pre~1dent
will never make a deal with the
House and Senate on his economic
package.
"I am convinced the American
pe&lt;iple strongly support my prqgram
and do not want it watered do*n," a
recuperating president was ~noted
as telling his closest aides ~t the ,
White House on Monday.
One day after a key House ·mem. ber said middle-level offici:4 were
Indicating Wlofflcially they were
willing to make a deal for a one-year

i· .

tax cut instead of a three-year plan,
Reagan's spokesman volunteered
the word that president said he "had
authorized no one in his adrnlniatration to ol!er'\181A1ative com-

House, said, "The president is not Okla., chairman (! the House
about to feel that we need to com- Budget Conunittee. :Jones said adpromise."
ministration officials appeared
"I don't know who's putting out wilting to drop Reagan's multiyear
that there's a COIIIJliOii lee in the ·-· plan for a -year tax cut and a
~•~~~ft U
'r
wind. But I haven't heard It here and congressional pledge to consider tax
p
1 ,
it's
much more important that the cuts In 1982 and again in 1983 if
But asked if tilat meant the
president would never compromise person upstair5 hasn't heard it," he federal spending were under conon Ilia program, deputy White House added, standing a few floors beneath trol.
Jones conceded he bad no "official
press secretary Larry Speakes told the living quarters where Reagan is
reporters: "Well, I never say never recovering from a gunshot wound statements" to that effect.
suffered in an assassination attempt
But official reaction came swiftly
from this podium,.l hope."
March
30.
at
the White House, where Speakes
And congressional aides said the
Treasury
Secretary
Donald
T.
said
talk of compromise "does mt
admlnlnatration's firm rejection of a
compromise waa predictable, at liegan, meanwhile, declared that a come from the president of the
least Wltil they can gauge their sup- one-year tax cut is "totally United Slates, who is the head of the
inadequate" and vowed the ad- administration."
pOrt in preliminary votes.
Jones, however, insisted later
But for now, Reagan's own com- ministration "will continue to press
lor
the
president's
proposal."
Monday
that some "sub-&lt;:ablnet of.
ments set the tone.
What
prompted
Resgan,
Bush
and
ficials"
met
with him last Friday to
Vice President George Bush, appearing before a group of trade Regan to speak out was a statement discuss the tax bill and "clearly inassociation executives at the White Sunday by Rep. James Jones, !). dicated tometheywereflexibie."
l VJlu.:JIIO o

Tentative approval given Meigs Local plans
· Meigs Local School I)istrict
It is reported that the State ConSuperintendent David L. Gleason trolling Board. haa approved a plan
haa received tentative approval of a whereby the district can keep a parmeasure which will provi1e the lion of b!J;es now bei!Jg paid to the
district with one rnilUon dolllts, bta · state if voters approve a bond issue
no Increase in taxes.
at the JWle 2 election. Approval of

the state is required before such a
plan can be carried out.
·

The plan to vote on the issue has
been ptanned by the Meigs Local
School District Board of Education
and Supt. Gleason for several mon-

ths. Meigs Auditor Howard Frank
has recommended that people of the
district be given the opportunity to
retain the money locally.
At the present time, the district is

(Continued on page 10)

•White lovable pluah

toy ·

$111

.....

NILSON'S 1110.

NILION'IIIO. U.ft

lillY
FLOWER

WDII PillET

Winning Ohio ldttery ~umber
&lt;U:VELAND - The wlnnlnc nwnber drawn Monday in the Oblo
Laltlry'a dally pme "The NWIIber" wu 317. The lotler)' reported a
- . . . . . . frUD the 1IIOIIeY Wllend on the drawing. Lottery ollklllllllid aalee ~ ~.40.50. Holden ol winning tickets are en-

.

•30'' Hlp

'

··~

U.S. destroyer.Conolly, are In CUban waters, the first Soviet naval
visit to the Caribbean In more than 18 months .
Though U.S. naval authorities said Monday they did not know the
rniuion of the Soviet shipa, the Kremlin earlier announced it had sent
a four-ship squadron for 'an "official friendly visit" to llivana
scheduled for Aprlllf&gt;-25.
·

TEL AVJV, larael- ~Dayan's bid for the bll1ance of power In
the IJraeH Parii!IIDI!Dt being elected JW!e 30 got ·a boost Monday when
the Rail faction decided to join his new party, the Movement for State
Rejuvenation.
·
.
Raft, headed by former Finance Minlater Ylgael Hurvitz, haa three
11111 in the 121knember Knellet, or ParHarnent.
Oplnlon polla already were projecting up to 11 aeall for the former
defenael!ld foreip mlnlater. Rafi'a support improved Ilia chancel of.
being wooed as a coalition partner If neither Prime Mlnilter
ilenlchem Begin's Llkud Bloc nor the Labor Party wlnta majoritJ.
' .

•12'' .o~ometw
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Nel10n's Drug Sto. ....

WASHINGTON~ Four shiPB of the' Rua8lan Navy, tracked by the

·Dayan's bid given big boost

'

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Soviets ships in Cuban waters

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low llllllld-"l. Su1u17 WednlldiJ.IIIIbl In miHII to aear 10. a.,ol rain IIIII' lltii'O JlBIQD tonlptllld Wa.dl7. NCII1bnlt«&lt;y win-

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Workers·
continue
strike

.

'

TWenty-four workers of tile Meigs

County Highway ~nt continued their strike today having

spent two weelta on picket llljes.
A check with the coUnty highway
department office arid the blfice of
the Meip County Comrniaslbners Indicated that there are no Defoliation
.-iOIIIII'I'IIlged at thla lillie to set•
Ue the two week old strike.
Hlghwa'y worker! bad earner
l!llablllhed a picket nne at lhe county )andflll but • court ..... illued
1ut Tbunday l'lllllOV1!d tile picket
Hneml broqhl•buut the~
ol the llndfW.
Meutlrne, deputitl of the deputll*lt of Sberiff Jametl J. Proflltt
nat beet onto their jobl Friday
fol1olriJW a lltrlkMrhlcb _..o bepn
Ajlrlll. Tile deputiellla'le MJ'MII to
l'l11a'll to their jalla far • !l'le day
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•
-~·---~----------

The

COmmentary

Carlton,Sea

Page-:-2...:.The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, APrll14,1981

_J._.K_upa_
· · _tric---:-k :

J__::..ames_
·

retirements benefits are paid from all retireeS over the age of 68. Under
65 to 68.
present law the llmitation applies to
It was a 11ot a final vote. Before a · perso115 over.72.
In any event, the hopeful signal is
bill is sent along to the full Ways and
Meall5 Corrunittee, a dozen different that such influential congressman as
formulas may be run through the J. J . Pickle of Texas, the subcomputers. Tentatively,latleast, tbe corrunlttee chalnnan, are prepa~
subcommittee also is thinking of to think the unthinkable: They are
removing the earnings limitatiOP for thinking of a major change in the
system by which millions of
Americans enter retirement.
And high time. It has been bad
enough, all these years, to suffer the
soft euphemisms and plain .sham
lll Cuurt Sln•t'l
Pomt'ruy, Ohi o
that have (,iulracterized Social
614-"NIS'
Security.
The system is known forDE\'OTED TO TilE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA
mally as Old Age and Survivors Insurance, but the system never has
~~
constituted "insurance" as the term
~m~ ~~.-~~~d·~
is generally used. The delicate word
~v
is that we make "contributioll5" to
ROBERT L. WfNGETI
the program. These are not conPublitihn
tributions, they are taxes. We are
soothed
by talk of "trust funds."
PAT WHITEHEAD
BOB HOEFLICH
There
are
no trust funds. Current
ANsbtant Publisht'riCuotrullt' r
benefits are paid from current
taxes.
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
The realities are worse than the
Nt'\I'S Editor
make-believe. The stunoing tax increases voted in 1977 were supposed
A MEMBER ul Tht' Assoc•ialt'd Prl:"ss. Inland Daily Prt&gt;ss A s~odallon and lht'
to make the system "solvent" or
Amt'rlnn NrWSpilpt'r Publishrn An ut'iclliun.
·
"actuaMaily sound," but those easy
tETrERS nF OPINIO~' ltrt' ~·l!'l cuml'd . Tht'~ Nhuuld bto lrss thwn lOO WIJTdS IURM- All
assurances already have proved
lrltt· r~ ilrt' subjri•l tu rdilint: and mus t bt• siKIIt'd with rutmt•, ~tddrt'S!I and tdl'phllnt'
numtwr . "'•• unsi.w;n••d lt'ltt' r~ ~o~· i ll tw publlsht'd . l .t'llt'rs sh11U ld ~ · in lti.OO 1a81t•, addrl'Nsinlt
hallow. When prospective benefits
isMu·s. nt•t pt• rs ••n~tlilit·~.
under present law are ranged against prospective revnues, we find an
unfunded liability approaching $1
trillion. That is for benefits to be
paid to persons already born.
The factors that produce t11is
melancholy picture contain no
mysteries. Quite simply, people are
If bigness is bad, then Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger, who sees
living
longer. If they retire at 65, the
a strong American Telephone ' Telegraph Co. as necessary to a strong
period
in which benefits must be
national defense, would seem to be out of step.
paid
becomes
a longer and more
So would government officil!ls who seek to save Chrysler Corp. and
costly
period.
A
complicating factor
bolster the car industry by a merger of Chrysler and Ford, fourth and
is that many workers aren't waiting
seventeenth on the list of largest U.S. industrial corporations.
f&lt;y65
to retire. They're retiring at 62
In contrast, William Baxter, who heads the Justice Department's an·
or'
63.
Forty-five years ago, when
titrust division, would be marching to the right tune, pledged to pursue an
antitrnst case against AT ', T, the biggest U.S. company.
Few people, however, seem to be certain that bigness is indeed bad at
all times and under all circumstances. It is very bad in many instances,
they say, and then concede that it may be necessary too.
There is no lack of opinions on the subject. The Supreme Court has
ruled many times. Politicians have won or lost on the issue this century.
Unions often denounce it. So do small businesses.
It has defenders too. Economists and industrialists often say the United
States cannot defend its dollar unless it has the exporting power of very
NEW YORK (AP) - If bigness is
large corporations. It takes an IBM, they say to sell electronic computers
bad,
then Defense Secretary Caspar
around the world. And, they say, it takes an Exxon, a Mobil and a Texaco
Weinberger,
who sees a strong
to control sufficient supplies of oil.
American
Telephone
&amp; Telegraph
Perhaps the biggest complaint against blgneN ls when it monopolizes
Co.
as
necessary
tp
a
strong
national
or threatens to monopolize aU aspects of an industry, thus putting itself in
defense,
would
seem
to
be
out of
a position to set prices and terms under which it operates.
step.
Opinions in the business community are no more unifohll, a realization
So would goverrunent officials who
that may surprise those who, for the first time, hear small-business
seek
to save Chrysler Corp. and
spokesmen rail agaill5t the power of big business.
bolster
the car industry by a merger
Union leaders commonly denounce big business practices, but some top
·
of
Chrysler
and Ford, fourth and
union people under certain circwnstances have been heard to praise and
seventeenth
on the list of largest
take pride in the elficiencies of volume that come with bigness.
U.S. industrial corporations.
In contrast,' William Baxter, w,jto
heads the Justice Department's antitrust division, would be marching
to the right tune, pledged to pursue
an
antitrust case agaill5t AT&amp;T, tbe
Sincerely. - Ms. Glenda Lawson,
Supervisor ; Mrs. Orva Jean Holter, biggest U.S. company.
Few people, however, seem to be
Aide; Meigs County Community
I am writing this letter to convey Classes and Adult Workshop lor the certain that bigness is indeed bad at
all times and under all cir·
to the people of this community my Mentally Retarded and Disabled.
cumstances. It is very bad in many
utter disgust and contempt for the
instances, they say; ,and then conperson or persons who are respon. ting"
cede that it may be necessary too.
sible for stealing our stereo.
I am employed as the floor super·
Saturday, April4, the Meigs High
visor for the Meigs County Adult School girls track team competed
Workshop for the mentally retarded against 17. other girls teams at the
and disabled. When I reported to Fairland Invitational Track Meet.
work this morning - and a beautiful
Even though the final score was
day I might add - I found that Wheelersburg High School76, Meigs
someone had helped themselves to 75, the girls performed admirably.
our almost brand-new stereo com- The winner was not decided until the
ponent outfit over the weekend.
final event, which was the mile
WASHINGTON - It goes without
Itmademesick!!!! .
relay.
I c;annot think of any better way to
A few of the girls on this year's saying that when it comes to book,
describe my feelings at this team are now seniors and have been film and TV rights, a notorious
moment. Wben I think of how hard performing together · five years - crime has a great deal more value
we have all worked to build this dating back to junior high days. than a run.of-the-ll!ill one that harschool and workshop since Sep- Would you believe these same girls dly got into the newspapers.
There was a time when the person
!ember into the best possible en· are practicing oh the same field they
vironment for your children - to used five years ago - the Meigs who was thought to have committed
make it a valuable learning
Junior High "track." I consider this the offense received the lion's share
of the money for telling his aide of
perience every moment they are to be ridiculous, to say the least.
here ~ it literally makes me sick to
I say this because of the fact an the story. But now, with legal fees so
think that someone would stoop so area at Meigs . High School is high , lawyers are demanding they
low as to steal what little we do have. available !or a track and was get their cut of the action.
Last week, an accused murderer
Everyone in the building (staff marked off last spring.
revealed
that his lawyer would take
and students/adults ) have gotten
The girls have an excellent' coach
his
legal
fee out of the potential
immense pleasure and satisfaction in Mr. Fisher, whO has hopes of
proceeds
of
a book contract.
from listening to our newly acquired seeing some of his girls make it to
The
D.
C. Bar Association Ill
stereo. And now we have the silence the state track meet this year.
looking
into
the matter because the
of its absence to remind us of this
I have followed this team for five
clisgustlng act I !!!
years and I must agree that barring arrangement could violate tile
If tbe person or persons who took al)y serious injuries, Meigs High District Bar Code of Ethics.
The reason why the District
our stereo reads this, I would appeal School could be represented at tbe
approve of lawyers sharing
doesn't
to you to retlirn the stereo. The chan- state meet.
in
tbe
literary
fruits of their clients'
ces of us replacing that stereo are
The building of a track has been
crimea
(although many
alleged
very slim and we are going to miss it ,cussed and discuaaed, but as yet the
slates
do),
is
that
a
lawyer might be
greatly. It is a sad, sad feeling to first shovel of sod hun't been turthink that you would steal from fifty ned. Probably, several people who
(50) kida who are pot as fortunate as
read this will say "Why spend
you Jn . many ways. But I would money !or a track, why does a school
safelybetthatallofthemllavemore need any sports?" Firat, a good
HOtiJ 01'1. I'U
integrity and honesty than some sports JII'OII'8Ill il good for the
S#IF /£'5
people have ever even thought of school. Sporta allo are the reuons
16'£.
JlOIIIJiing l I commend them highly, for many studentl' Jta)'in8ln school
/
which Ia more than I can say for you. becaue It provides Incentive, and
Before I cloae, I wish to thank lastly,lt teaches the partlclpaats .to
everyone In this COI!Ullunity who hu be good 1-n. u well u .wlnnen.
Jiven 11110 much support th!a school
Any readen ol this letter 11'111 eeryear. I think lt is IUCh a plty that one talnly agree that with the state of af.
or two people could be 110 unfeeling fain ol today you'd better be a good
u to do what they have done. But I ·
feel we are alllurvlvors and that Ia a · . In clllllna. I would like to wllh Mr.
good pGilUve feeling. 'I'hanU to all Fllher aDd llllliriJ lbe 'ltl1 belt
of you who do care what happens to thU Jlll'lnl. - Dick Rupe, P11Deroj,
ua.
Ohio.
WASHINGTON - A House subcommittee last week took a deep
breath, mumbled a prayer for
political survival, and made the first
intelligent move in many years
toward rescuing our Social Security
system from the mess it is in. The
subcorrunittee voted gradually to in·
crease the age ·at which full

The Daily Sentinel

If bigness

•

IS

1Secur1ty began, half of all
males over 65 were working. Now
only one-fifth of all males over 65 are
working, and the~ retirement
periods have increased by one-third.
II! a study just released by tbe
National Federation of Independent
Business, Dr. Michael J. BOllklil
states ·the case blunUy. A vast ~rt
of Social Security is plainly and simply a transfer of income from the
yoiJIIg and productive to the old and
no longer productive. The implicit
understanding that has kept the
system from political collapse is
that today's workers, who ani now
supporting their ~rents and grandparents, eventually will ride on the
backs of their own children and ·
~

grandchildren, and so ad infinitum. · -ttaxes. This would shift about
That pi'OIIpect is liound to hold ~thil'ds fi the COlt to the
diminishing appeal for new Treasury's general fund, but thill
generatons. AI presimt three . would have the virtue of honesty. We
workers support one recipient. When would be treating welfare for what ll
those born in the postwar baby boom is, to wit, welfare. He too ftCOIIIo
begin to retire, about ~l!O, tbe ratio mends phasing .in an extended
willdropto2-to-l.Atsomepointboth retirement age, 10. that by 21\0(1 or
employees and emplayers may rise 0010, full benefits would not be paid
in political rebellion against an in- unW age 68. .
.
tolerable burden.
Such an extell5ion, by Dr,
In some fashion, as Pickle's sub- estimate, would produce an extra
C0111J11jttee is acknowledging, that $170 billion in taJ:es, but mDI'e to the
enormous burden will have to be point,itwouldsaveabout.blllion
relieved. Dr. Baskin's chief proposal in benefits. If it's necell&amp;lll'Y to save a ·
is to separate those benefits to which system that me&amp;ll5 so much to so
a retiree is entitled by reason of his many - and it is necessary - it will
own tax . payments from those do us no harm to work a year or so
benefits that are financed out of longer.

WIZARDRY- SaD Diego Padre shortstop Ozzle Smltb doe~~ tbe blgb

· step u be avoidll ClnclnDatl'&amp; Dave Collln&amp; to' complete a double play
duriDg tbe third Inning of tbelr game ~onday Digblln San Diego. (AP

Laserpboto).

Wai

m" vam'

Eastern, Southwestern and Han·
nan Trace poSted victories Monday
night in the closely knitted Southern ·
Valley Athletic Conference.
Eastern's 8-7 . victory knocked
Southern from the unbeaten ranks in
the league.
.
· EAGLESWIN
Eastern's Eagles edged Southern,
3-7, bere Monday evening behind a
four run sixth inning rally. The inning was highlighted by a Roger
Gaul double, two walks, an error,
and a single by catcher Gary Griggs.
Mike Bissell carried a big bat with
tjVO triples f9r Eastern. Other
Eastern hitters were Greg Wigal a
single, Rob Smith a single, and Nick
Leonard a single.
Zane Beegle paced Southern with ·
a triP-le, ~ouble , __and single, whit~
Dille Teafordbad a lOPg home run in

I

There is no lack of opinions on the
sub~t. The Supreme Court · has
ru!ell many times. Pollticiall5 have
Ior lost on the issue this century.
Uni ns often denounce it. So do
businesses.
It has defenders too. Economists
and Industrialists often . say the
Uni~ States cannot defend its
dollir unless it has the exporting
po\ver of very'large corporations. It
takes ar. IBM, they say to sell electronic computers around the world
And, thQy say, it takes an Exxon, a
Mobil and a Texaco to control sufficient supplies of oil.
Perhap9 the biggest complaint
against bigness is when it
monopolizes or threatens to
monbpoli2e all aspe&lt;:ts of an industj:Y, thus putting itself in a
posi~?n to set prices and tenns un·
der whiclllt operates.
otlini~ In the business community are no more uniform, a

realization that niay surprtse those cited in 11178 by a House subwho, for the. first time, hear small· conunittee on antitrust, coll5umers
business spokesmen rail against the and employment.
power of big business.
·
The subcommittee's figure~ show
Union leaders conunonly denoun- that in the years 1900 to 1976 there
ce big business practices, but some was a steady inc~ in the pertop union people under certain cir- centage of manufacturing usets
cumstances luive been heard to controlled by the top 100 and top 200
praise and take pride in · ~ ef· manufacturers.
ficiencies of volume that come with
"The proportion of those assets
bigness.
controlled by the 100 largest firms
Labor is a defender of bigness in increased fr~:m 39.7 percent to 47.6
others ways, most interestingly in percent, with the maxlmum of 49.1 '
the manner in which pension and · percent recorded in 1968," the report.
other funds have been invested. states.
'
Shares of the very biggest ·COffio · "Tbe 200 largest firms," it said,',
panies have been favorites.
"increased their market share from ·
Some analysts do not share that 47.7 percent to 60 percent, with the ,
philosophy. They view some of the maxlmum of 61 percent recorded in ,
biggest concerns as having lost their 1971."
innovative spirit.
This concentration was, of course,
And so the arguments go, and big at the expense of smaller
business gets bigger and bigger, or businesses, which now are seeking
so it would appear from U.S. to slow and, they sometimes
Federal Trade commission data declare, even reverse the trend.

1-.-.

r

'

WITH OFFICES LOCATED AT
Veterans Memorial tbpital
· Mulbeily Heights, Pomeroy, Ohio

third.
"He threw very hard," said . ~!lt·
cher Bob Boone. "His slider was
OHice Hours: 1:30
5:00 p.m.
very sharp tonight."
Monday through Friday ·
Tbe Phillies took a ~ lead in the
second inning against John CanFOR AN APPOINTMENT CALL :
992·5798
. delaria. Manny Trillo walked and
one out later Larry Bows doubled. t-----.4--- - - -- - - - -- - - -- Bob Boone singled Trillo home, with
Bowa going to third. Carlton grounded to first base and Bowa scored
ahead of Bill Robinson's throw.
Smith forced Carlton at second but
Boone scored when shortstop Tim
Foli, thinking it was the third out,
flipped the ball to Carlton as he roun·
dedthebag.

a.m. ·

- ·

SO, YOU'VE BOUGHT A

NEW CAR!

ll&lt;Jdgers 4, Glanlll 3
Pinch hitter Jay Johnstone singled
home the tie-breaking run in a threerun fourth-inning rally. The Dodgers
ran their record to 4-0 despite some
wildness on the part of starter Bob
Welch and three reilevers, who
isSued eight walks. The triumph
went to rookie Dave Stewart, the fir·
st of his majot league career. With
one out in the Los Angeles fourth and
the Dodgers trailing :1-1, Ron Cey,
Pedro Guerrero and Mike Scioscia
got consecutive singles off AI Ripley.
Scioscia's single was an infield hit
and Cey scored from third when
second baseman Joe Morgan threw
wildly past first.

comes

t than the trial. He could
even kn
gly, or unknowingly,
tailorl\
defeMe to make a better
story
.
i 'Uous conversation could
tak Ia in many states where a
can fo bidding a defense lawyer
from
· in literary rights does
notexist:
·
"l.efty,1as you know, we're ill the
second week of the trial and I think
I've' madj, a pretty strong case for
you.''
"I ain'lf:plainlng. You gave ihe
D.A. a
for his money. I got a
feeiinl!
jury ls going to come
back With 1 not gUilty verdict."
"Tllat·~ what my editor thinks,
too,
. Originally,. when we
t the outline of the book,
we
lt would make a better
story I ot you off at the end. But
now t
keepa refering to our
cue "'
'Crime of the Century '
we bellev It would be better if yoo

i

AMERICAN LEAGUE

EAST
Milwaukee
Baltimore
Detroit

New York
Toron!D

A

LET US ·HELP
YOU QIOOSE

JUST THE
RIGHT INSURANCE.

214 E. Main St.

0
L1

P~'iw

661 GB "

New
Yurt
PMadelfhla

2
2
z

I
2
2

.667
.500
.500

Montreo
St. l.ouio&lt;
Pilt.&gt;bulllh
Chicago
Los Angel"

"
I
1

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WEST

l1 l1 .500
:1

Ookland
CalJftnli11
Chicago

1

11
1

·-

Kanau C\Iy

Teua
Sealtle

I
2
3

.500
.333
.250

M-y·o~am~

.~m

2
21;
' "'
3
3\0

'"

Toronto 1, New York 1
Baltirnort :i, Bolton 1
Detroit at Kansu City, ppd., r1in
Ookland 3, CaJUomlo 2 •
.
Only games S&lt;heduled

IT:J:~

ir

workfi

~t' ~~v~!S::e~o:ona:m~

iO.IIIIlCarltn !HI)
Cleveland (Walls IHIJ at r .... (Mat·

=

lad ~I) , \ n)

• Detr&lt;llt IMorriJ IHI I at K""""

1

&lt;Zam
-

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S.nDiego
S.n FrancJ.sco
Houston

lI

""~.500667500 GB_"'
·
.500
.333
333
·
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211
4

=~~~H!;..,..,"t"1~\~•in8•

CJncJnriaU 7, Son · Diego I
lJJs Angeles 4, San 'Franc.~ 3
Only game.!! &amp;cheduled
Tuoolay'oGae
Chicago (Rewichel ~I ) al Montreal
(Rogers IHII
S~Louls !Mortlnez IHIJ a1 New York

~~~Ia I.O~Walk

IHII

at

Hooslon

iJ .

Niekro ~I ) , In)
CJnc:JnnaU !Putm'O IHI) at Son Diego
(eurlil ' !HI), (n )
Los Angel.. !Valenzuela
1

F~,,:""..,~~,;t

1-&lt;ll

at San

u.s. cars, aome imports.

Trained
PROTECT MOVING PARTS

LUBE &amp; OIL CHANGE

.,..

1ncludes our 9· point maintenance check :

• Transm ission flui d • Powe r sree r ing flu id
• Oiferential fl uid • Br ake flu id 1 Air fil ter
· • Battery cables 8. water level • Belts
e Hoses • Tire pressure &amp; condition.

r

: l :"

2
0 4
M~''Go'""

elon and steering ayatema •

.

second game of their National
I ff
Basketball Association p ayo
series agaill5t Houston, the Rockets'
center responded with 41 points and
15 rebounds in the next game, a 11299Houstonvictory.
"They shouldn't have made him
mad," Rockets teammate Calvin
Murphy said of Malone. "Noone's
going to keep him down two games
in a row."
The Rockels, who resume their
best-of-seven Western Conference
semifinal at San Antonio tonight,
can only hope Murphy's law holds
true. The Spurs did their best job on
Malone Sunday, limiting him to 17
poinls and nine rebounds and
healing the .Rockets 114-112 to even
the series at twll victories apiece.
Moses
have been a

worry about.

'

WEEKEND AT MEIGS INN
'
I-. -FRIDAY SPECIAL-~~~

CHOICE OF HAM, STEAK OR WHITE FISH
Salad Ba, 6 oz. Prime Rib,
Oroice of Potato or Vegetable,
25 Plus Tax

$7

Soft Drink, Tea or Coffee.

.-------------..:.!.!!:::.:::.,.:::::::::.::.:.:::...:::::..:..:.:.:::..:.....j

Entertainment
Friday &amp;Saturday
'

'

The Daily Sentinel
(UIII'IIIIHIIJ
AIMvlt. . lfMIIIh" lla,bc.
PublilhodtlnOIIh
&lt;Ytt'/ SU!Idoy,
'llcnday
Frldor,U I CoOirl
Jllnet,
b)&gt;

tho Ollio Volley 1'11D111111111 ContoanY •
Ml&amp;llimed1a. Inc., Pomeroy, Otio- 46,.,
lft.UM. ·Second clau poata&amp;e paid at

Are you ,prapc~~~ad

~,Ohio.

~

for Aprl151h?

-ly Plw· T
i l e - -ond
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see H&amp;R Block

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lll'eontor·-IIUIIICRII'I'IO IIATEll

•

.-ida

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a.ctr ,.. help.._ ,.,..
need i1 - · wi1b Cllllteaicm hoan aad Milby locaO...
AptJOilllllltllu ~~e ataillble if r• pN(er, or i•IIOP by,

not dllirinl to porlllo corr1ar
--lll--lo'l'!leDollJ
• a 1, I or 1111'1011111 - · Cradlt
wll bap~u•rriar- . -.
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(·

.\1

·THE MEIGS' INN

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WEU 'MAd THE TNC LAM WOIIIC fOI 't'OU'

1;11 • b)&gt; llllil ~In­

IUILIUIICIIPnN

SERVm

U:you bawea'tlilcd, H&amp;llllodt is JIIOpalr
etoftcd ro efticieady 1J1eP1ft IOlllmGm
. Mffw rltt AptiJUrJulr..tli..,,

One- ... . ...................... 11.111
Onellcnh .. ' ' ........ ' ' . ' . .. ' " ... 14.41
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No I

ALL LEGAL
BEVERAGES

D My taxes are fllett
o lfs not too late to

· Advertfaln&amp; Reprlltatatlve, Llncllnl
. Pam~ABTER :

: .;

I

we~i

1

2
1
I
2
2

• lnapect and rotate all tour tfrw ,.

Set caeter, camber. and toe-lrt
proper alignment • tnapect OU."ii~l

MEIGS TIRE aNTER
Spurs
Malone,
by forcingin him
:t~om~always
· g:h:t.~H~e~is:a:g:re~a~t
into a riled
sub-par
performance
the · ~to~p~la~y~a~g~am~·
competitor and
someone to ~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~OII~ia~

'

1
me."
"I cOuld have done better With a:· :

••

2L
1
I
1

f,.ont wttett dtiwtlftd
Cllt'ttttft Htra .

ByAssoclatedPress
little tired," suggested C. ·~CorYoudon'ttUgonSuperman'scape. ' zine, the &amp;-foot-11, ~der who
Youdon'tspit into the wind. And you is one.of several Spurs~ turns
don't get Moses Malone angry.
playing bump and run with Malone.
The last time the San Antonio "That's not to say he won't be ready

M.Uwallkee at Chicago
Cleveland at TeiW, (n)
New Yorll at T....,lo, (n)
!Jdr&lt;)lt at Ka..., Clly, (n)
Ookland at Calllomla, (n)
, _ al Seattle, (n)

~o~)'~ ~f~:

•

1

IHI/il.;:'k
-&lt;ll at California
1&lt;1), In) ·
&lt;Koooman ~1 1 at Seaule
~1 ) , lnl

Only ...... oicbeduled
W-.uy'IGamet
Bolllmore at Booton

obligation is to my publllhen. After,
all, they'l'l! the DMI • are peylng,

'

City

(1·-

=

public defender."
•
"You kDow you d011't honestly;
believe that, lAtty. Have yvu ever'
heard of a public dander who hul
Willi a Pulitzer Prile?"
•

(Vockovldl IHI I at Chicago

2

"

runs in the sixth inning to edge North
Gallia, 7.0 in a six inning contest
called because of darkness at Rio
Grande College's Evans Field.
During the inning, James and
Mike Waugh walked, Montgomery
was hit by a pitch, Kelly Petrie
doubled and Toby Sheets singled.
North Gallia had taken a !i-3 lead
in the fourth on two walks, an error
and single by Church. Waugh who
relieved Danny Brumfield in the
fourth was the winning pitcher while
Shaw took the loss.
Brulnfield, Waugh and Petrie
combihed for seven strikeouts and
nine .Jvalks. Shaw and Don Shupe
fanned four and issued six walks.
The!victory gave Hannan Trace a
2-6 ov~rall record.
·
" .,

Don't get Moses Malon'e mad

NATIONAL LEAGUE
IU8T

w 22

i l

Booton

Cleveland

got the electric chair."
tbe difference between you getting
"Are you crazy or something? life and the chair ls worth a half a ·
WHy would ·it be better if I got the million bucks."
chair?.''
"Sowhatareyou going to do?"
"Wait a minute. I don't mind you
"I've got to persuade the jury in
taking your fee out of the literary my summing up that all our witrights to my trial, but I don't want to nesses have been lying through their
fry lor It."
· teeth, and IIOCiety would be much
"Listen, Lefty, when you carne to better of( if you paid the ultlmte
me, you didn't have a dime. You price for your heinoua crime. But l·
chose me because I was the best have to be subtle about ll I don't·
criminal lawyer in the CO\IIltry. But want to hurt my reputation In tbe:
I'm not in this business for my legal profealon."
.
health. I don't want you to go to the
"I think the wholethingstlnb." ;
chair any more than you 'do: But if I
"Look, Lefty, I'll even throw in an• ·
my lime."
·
"Can you figure out some other
way of ·ending the book without me
goingtolhechalr?"
"!.could get you life, but every
major Hollywood sllldio Ia interelted
in rna1dng a movie from the trial. We
can't make a big deal unl• you get
capital puniahment. My a(ent said

test~nedbecauseofaheavtdowo-

,

TueiUy'oG...,..
O.lllmoro 10. MaiWle• IHI I at a..ton

mol'11~
· rested in how the book

the first to tie the ~core at I·!. Kent pour.
The Highlanders plated a run in
Wolfe continued to rip the ball with a
single and triple for his 18th hit of the tbe first on Gilbert's single, a stolen
year. Jeff Sopber added an infield base, aingle by Scott Russell and an
.
single and John Porter added a line error.
Southwestern put the game on ice
single.
Southern control and five errors in the fifth on a single by Wayne
led to its downfall at it dropped to&amp;-2 Sizemore, a sacrifice, two errors, a
and 3-1 in the SVAC, while Eastern is sacrifice Oy by Russell, double by
Dale Newberry and steal of home.
now 7-3and~2 in league play.
Jay Burleson, in going the route,
Linescore:
•
Eastern
011 114 0-8 7 I · yielded just one hit, a single by Jack
Soutl)ern
010 310 2- 7 9 5 Minor. Terry Porter was the ldsing
Batteries: Allen, Wigal (WP) 4th · pitcher. Burleson fanned seven and
and Griggs. K. Wolfe, Teaford, and did not issue a walk. Porter walked
five and struckout five.
Rees. Home run - Dale Teilford.
The win gave Southwestern a 3-3-1
SW 5 KC 0
season mark.
At Cheshire, Coach Jack James'
Wildcalll Win
Southwestern Highlanders defeated
Hannan Trace erupted for four
Kyger Creek, fHl in a five irining con. .

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

A lawyer .has to eat ______Art_.B_uc_hwa..,...---:ld.

ex·

.

Eastern, Southwestern, Wildcats win

Is Weinberger out of step?

Disgusting theft

•

By Tbe AUOclated Preea
Steve Carlton is · ~ the strong,
· silent type. That is, his left ann is
Still strong and Carlton himself is
still silent.
. The 1980 National League Cy
Young Award winner earfled his fir·
st victory of the new season Monday
night, scattering nine hits · as the
world champion Philadelphia
Phillies won their home open~r 5-1
over the Pjttsburgh Pirates before a
crowd of 60,4ll4.
·
"When we get to talk about Lefty's
(Carlton's) performances they ail
run together, they're all so good,"
said Manager Dallas Green. "He
· shut down a Pirate team that can
swing the bats. And when you do
that, you're doing something."
In the only other National League
games, the unbeaten Los Angeles
Dodgers edged the San Francisco
Giants 4-3, the ' Atlanta Braves nipped the winless Houston Astros 2-1 in
10 innings and the Cincinnati Reds
trounced the 8;1n Diego Padres 7-1.
The Phillies received their gold
World Series rings before the game.
Then they went out and lashed II
hits to back Carlton's one-walk, ·fivestrikeout pitching. He was in trouble
in just one inning, the sixth, but
escaped when right fielder Loruile
. Smith caught a fly ball and threw out
Bill Madlock trying to advance to

··s

bad

Letter to the editor

••

postwzns
•

Toward a socia] security solutionL_______:_____

JOHNNY A. BRAWNER, M. D.
GENERAL SURGEON

Phone 992·3629 · Pomeroy, Oh.

'

6111. Ml.ln St.
Pomeroy, OM.

. .............,........."
I'll. tft·179J

.

You must be 21 or accompa'nieel
by parent or legal guardian.

IIIOkl!
' '

0,. T-.·Tltln.·llt.'

'

•••

APNINTM.N'IISAVAILAILI

'

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••
'

Ohio

FINISHES SECOND - Heath United Metbodlst
;Cburcb League Tournament. Pictured are, front row, 1;t. John Byer, Sleven Jenkins, De·nnl' Aull, and Charleo

Wayland. Back row - Perk Ault, Dewayne Weber,
Sam Mlklos, Mlke Drebel, and Mickey Davenport. Not
pictured, Coordinator Dallas Weber.

..•

'
••'

processing books, Humans ihink.
"COme now, Friend Rosch, you
they are "? clever becawre they ·, don't shut off typewriters. You
Have you ever spent an entire
can type lrith both their front
uncover them and you type."
weekend locked in your ·I"'QJJ
paws..
.
.
"I say, Albert, this ill an elecbeca1111e you were afraid to come
I
type
wi~
an
four
ol
my
paws.
tric
typewriter~ A hlllll80 inout?
.
Friend JiiOach climlled up on
vented them so they can ·work
I Will alttlng on the edge of Blue
'
faster. 11
the blackbOard and found out that
·Eye's delk last week and I heard
Adreadful idea had taken fonn
ber and the klnclergarten teacher
in my mind and I jumped back
dl8CII8Iing a Flea Market.
to work. !He read them · aloud
onto the table. Slowly I turned
. Now, if there's one thing that 1
while I typed. I didn't even look
over one can!, then another, then
, .don't need, It's fleas. So, !spent
back at my cards - oile of the firanother ... All . of them were
, the weekend In my room. Late
st things l learned at ~varti
blank.
" Sunday night Friend Roach told
University was how to type, and 1
No one told me I had to tum the
· me that a flea llllll'ket is a kind of
typewriter on. Humans. ·
dO!I't make errors. We worked an
' • sale. I feel very foollah, and I
nlghllong.
"Cheer up, Albert, old man, at
- . !he' klndergrten raised an
Dawn was beginning to break
least the cards aren't' covered
the money they need.
· over the playground when we
with mistakes. Albert? ....Albert,
Tile most dreadful thiDg has · finally finlshed. I clllnbed upon
what are you doing with that rubhaJ!I)elled. I think of a way to help
the windowsill by Roach to cool
ber band? I say, you don'thave to
in this place and some human no , my feel against the glass. We sat . get hostile! "
poe ever heard of messes me up. ·
in comp8nlonable silence a long
If I ever catch· Roach, he's
·All week long I have listened to
time.
.
going to leam what hostile
that nice Mrs. Johnson pounding
Then, · h said, "Did you
meanB !
away on those typeWriter keys,
shut off the typewriter, Albert? "
Sincerely. - Albert E. MoQSe .

~~~~~:~f:~

EIGS

$115

.

a

Art workshops pVanned at.Library

KIT

asc
REO. REr.

SELSUII ILUE
SHAMPOO

THIRD PLACE TEAM - The Syracuse United
:Methodist Church captured third place in the Meigs
·County Church League Tournament at Meigs HJgh
.;School Sunday. Team members are front, l·r, Jimmy

Joe Hemsley, Dennis Moore, and Kenny Buckley. Back
row, Brian Hamilton and NeDKnight. Absent was Rick
Ash,

'.

:!Miller handcuffs Meigs

Weekly art workshops will be held
at the ·Middleport Library by the
Bend 0' the River Artists, a l!ewly
organized art club in Meigs County.
• . Tbe workahopri will be for sketelling and palnting artiSta and others
~ feel the need for weekly work
slimulatioiL Tiley will be held
weekly on Mondays at 7 p.m.
Tbe busineas meetings for the
association (BORA) will be held on
the first Thursday evening of each
mC!Dth at the Crafty Ladles Shop
workshop in POIIlerOy,
II was noted during a recent
meeting that the new group has been
invited to join the Southern Hills Art
,Council, a f()W'o(:OUOty wnbrell&amp;
8880Ciation consisiing of Meigs,
Gallia, Vinton, and Jackson CoUJ10
ties. The Counctl will give strength
~ the smaller Individual groupit by
JM'Uvidlng newaleUers covering an
h art activities and preventing
~cling schedules of activities.

I

TUM
I
TAILITI
ANTACID

PEPPIIUIIItrfl

~

.t.ll'l, IJUVOM

3 roll plcl

"'·$145

2,~99c

REO. RET. 11.15

REO. RET. tl.llt

NIGHTOP

YISIIE
EYE DROPS

"- ,. -.OLAY
·l ~~ J IUUTY CIIEAM

\,~~ $389

"" $125
.

...
.

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Hours : Open Daily 9 to 8
Sun. l to 5

...

~

WAVERLY - Behind a three hit
pttching performance by Jamie
Miller, host Waverly rolled to a 2-0
win over Meigs Monday in an
SEOAL baseball contest. Miller fan·
ned 11 and walked t)lree in going the
distance.
Jeff Wayland had a good·night for
tJeigs, but the Maraude r offense
cbuldn't produce any runs. He fani!~ two and walked four, while
·~lowing just three hi~

Wayland singled in the second.
stole second then was stranded on
base after two more K's. In the four·
th Jerry Fields walked, but also was
left on base.

In the seventh, Wayland singled,
Boyer singled, to put runners at first
•
~ · Waverly scored first in the fourth and second. Mike miller then hit one
eh a leadoff !lome run by Scott to the deepest part of the field in the
!:)alton. The Tigers broke into the gap fo r what appeared to be a sure
8coring column again in the fifth on extra base hit. A timely leaping snag
by the centerfielder, however, shut
~ J oe Moore single, two outs to the
the
door on Meigs bid to score.
short stop, two consecutive wild pitJ
.
Wayland had two singles, and
Ches, and an error.
Jim Boyer a single for Meigs hitting
: Meigs tried to get the runner at attack.
third, but the ba ll hounded out of the
third baseman's glove and into the
Meigs plays Belpre today at home,
!mortstop's path allowing the run ·to then hosts Wellston Thursday.
st:ore.
Linescore:
: : Meigs threatened four times in the Meigs
000 000 0--0 3 3
;same, but never struck paydirt. In Waverly
000 110 0--2 3' I

HEARING TESTS SET
for Pomeroy, Ohio
THURSDAY,
APRIL 16. 1981
9 AM TO ~2 NOON
'

Will Be Given By

Mr. H. William Mattingly

~IQ.

fliTAIL 11.21

MILK
OLATI
I

•

BEllONE ConsUltant Who'Will Be At:
MEIGS INN, POMEROY, OHIO

AEG. RlTAIL 11 .H

OLDI.ICI
I TICK

Anyone who has t rouble hearin g is wel come to have a hearing test us·
ing moder n elec tronic equ ipment to deter m ine If his loss is one which
may be helped. Some of the q wses of hear ing loss wi ll be explained
and diagrams of how the ear wor ks will be shown .

L~i~OZ:I'""

We Al so Ser vice and Repair All Makes of Hearing Aids.

LAHI.

Batteries and Supplies For All Makes For Sale.
.
IF YOUCA NN OTCOME IN CALL THE HOTEL FOR A HOME APPOINTM ENT.
PHONE 992·3629

:Lost Sunday .morning at Rock Springs in the Meigs High
·School area.
'
REWARD

_

Please phone 992-2651 or 992-5627

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' 't~COMPUTERS
1st in Features, Performance, Price!

CHICKS,

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J~llllill•••••••pl
from

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RADIO SHACK HAS OTHER TRS-80 COMPUTERS
TO FIT EVERYONE'S NEEDS FROM $249 TO $10,000.
AVAILABLE ONLY AT RADIO SHACK ITORES, COMPUT!R CINTIIII
AND DEALeRS. CHECK YOUR LOCAL PHONE BOOK FOR UITINGI.

··--·

.

IICIII$10

EJ- 107

Bridal fare for Denise Marshall
Mary Martin entertained recently
with a showe[ honoring Denise Mar$hall, bride-elect of Dana Fick, in
the fellowship hall of the Middleport
Church of Christ.
Ablue and white color scheme was
·carried out and Mrs. Martin presented Miss Marshall with a corsage.
Games were played·and the winners
were Sheryl Johnson', Ruth Gosney,

Betty Van Meter, and Lula Hampton. Cake, punch and nuts were served to those named and Iva Powell,
Rhoda Hackett, Eunie Brinker,
Zuelelia Smith, Judy Marshall and
Ruby Marshall.
Sending gifts were Veda Davis,
Cheryl Lehew, Faye Wildermuth,
Florence Richards, Pearl Knapp,
Kate Welsh, and Joan Tatterson.

Amanda Brinker

Brian Randolph

Situations today

asse!S.
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24 -Nov . 22)
Serioos respons ibil ities should not
be shelved ·today in hopes they'll
care for themselves. That wh ich you
neglect may comPOUnd itself and
cause new complications.
SAGITT!IRIUSJ N.f.!. 23· Dtc. 21)
In social situations today it may
prove unwise to appolnl yourself
chairman of the entertainment com·
mlttee. Friends won't like to be told
how to have a good time.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22·Jan. 19)
Competitive situations aren 't likely
to be your cup of tea tOday. If at oil
possible, try to avoid them . Let
challenges be Ia ken up by others.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 191 Be
careful tOday when dealing with persons who hold equally slrong views.
They won't appreciate your try ing lo
make them over Into vour own mold.
PISCES (Ftb. 20.Marcll 20) Even
If lhings have been running pretly
smooth financ ially up until now,
don't take matters for granted
today. There may be a fly In !he oint·
ment .

·

Social
Calendar

lights for dancing Ia the school

Local children have birthdays
Amanda Brinker, daughter of Mr. Johnad, Jerry and Chuckie, and
and Mrs. Butch Brinker, Pomeroy, Scott Brinker.
recently observed her third birSending gifts were Mr. and Mrs.
thday.
Bill Hubbard, Mrs. Edna Howell,
Cake, ice cream, Kooi·Aid and col· Mrs. John Bacon, Mr. &lt;Jnd Mrs.
fee were served. Attending were Virgil Dill, Jeremy and Matthew.
Mrs. Agnes Boggess and Donnie,
Mrs. Jill Chapman and Becky, Mrs.
Mary Bowen and Donna, Mrs. Betty
Brian Randolph, son of Mr. and
Barnett and Isaac, Mrs. Linda
Mrs.
Clarence Randolph, observed
Moore, Bobby, Becky and Allen,
Mrs. Linda Jenkins, Destiny, D. J . his seventh birthday on April 7.
At his Jll!r\Y a van cake was served
and Dougie, Mrs. Sally Holman,
Tracey, Kelly, Bryan, Jar~od and with ice cream. Presenting gifts to
Monica, Mrs. Shirley Willis, Lisa, him were Mr. and Mrs. Allen Sayre,
Julia, Bobbie and Tim, Mrs. Jean grandparents, Roma and Pete
Lipscomb, Travis and Shawn, Miss Sayre, Sandra Courtney , Mr. and
Darlene Dunn, Linda Dunn, Mark Mrs. Clarence Rand9lph, Sr ., grandSalser, Mr. and Mrs. Buck Willis and parents, Mrs. Inez Randolph, great·
Eddie, John and Amy Harrison, grandmother, and Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Patty Imboden, Jody and Steve Hawk and Stacy .

'Miss Springtime ' contest
underway by weight loss club
The "Miss Springtime" contest
was discussed at a recent meeting of
TOPS OH 1466 of Rutland.
Nellie Haggy, leader, pesided at
the meeting with Linda Stewart and
Jackie Searles being welcomed into
the club membership. Mrs. Haggy
was queen for the week with the
most weight loss, with Mrs. Stewart
as rwmer-up. Shorty Wright lost the
most weight for the previous week.
The honorees were presented a
dollar each and given ribbons.
The convention held in ColumbuS

was discussed and it wsa noted that
Phyllis Clay, a KOPS, was among
those honored. She was presented
the traditional white cap and tassel
by Kay Sage, area coordinator for
Ohio. Mrs. Clay received fl owers ·
and other gifts.
Mrs. Haggy announced a ne'!' contest. Members are to take bath
towels on May 13. These will be
presented to the member who has
lost the most weight. Mrs. Clay led
the group in a series of exercises.

'RJESDAY

MJD.OIDO VALLEY Amateur
Radio Club school for beginners
Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at Mason County. Court House anneJ:. Those Interested in amateur rsdio work are
welcome. Regular meeting May I, at
same locaUon.
CHESTER TOWNSHIP Trustees
Tuesday 7:30 p.m. at Chester Town
Hall.
MEIGS DAV Chapter 53 Tuesday
at6:30 p.m. at chapter home on' But·
palemal
grandplrenla~,
and
Mrs. Alfred Rulcbel,
• the temut Ave. omcers for 1881~ to be
elected. DAV members must attend .
palemal grea~ ~·
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter of Beta 1
Hue! Haye~, S)TaCIIII,
~,
Sigma Phi ru.lay at 7: ~ p.m. at
patemal great·grandmotiM!r Ia
the Meigs Inn.
Albert Rulcbel, Melbourne,

RuscbF

~appy Easter
Sundty, April1 9

...

l-i ii'IIM.

.Area.goings on.

,.

· GoiDg-away
gift given
.

'

~ he finest

The nat AmeriCan Red c.u.
BloodmoiiiJe will be in P'oiiiOI oy at

na,
p.m..
AjJrll
• pufrllln
r==:.:..:.:==..=:....:~:;.;;;;;;~;;:~.
Mldcftlpcri
- :a.2llfil*
of bload
ill r-;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;~=======:;1
II
..
On June 2, 1977, Alva Matheny of Point
Plea·
.
~':.~===
NOncE ~UIJC HEMINGs
sant pu ~chased the very first V.W. Rabbit

In C(llallty,

rmhntll and 100dn"'. Ch001e Crom m~ny
..artmtnts or dt ft elou• candte1 especillly dec·

ror.wd r(X

· Bloodmobile to be here

Malben7 lfltiiiU hn 1:II to e

21 b. ~ lod Chocola te • $8.85

RuM II Sto.er C.n~it• are

,

the Senior Cllllenlt quarten on

lib. A..t.d Chocola t.1 $./.110

r.-•er.

In 111-. RIIIM••~~'~ uked to
1111rUprllll Gil tbelr ealllldln IIlii

. reportto_8!"_!t!God.

u'OU'B ,.«.
··
"·
()g..,rs nutrttwn

.

Rabbit Pellets. ·chick Startar, Bunn~ Salt Spools, CaiJII,
RabDit Bottles, LlHer, and Supplies t'r all Small

. ' J

Etta Mae Hill, Jeannie and Valerie
Connolly, Eileen Buck, Bev Crouch,
Betty Roush, Gene and Shirley
Smith, Edna. Roush, Donna Smith, .
Bertha Grimm, and Bernie Roush.

I

NODIMA

'&lt;'.I

AniMODERN
399W. Main
992·2164
TH!: STORE WITH
PETS, STABLES, . AilG~&gt;

Angie and Regina Manuel, Shelly
Connolly,. Eileen Roush, Nancy
Russell and Mandy, Jeanette Duffy,
Margaret Rose, and Alison Findley.
Sending gifts were Mary Roush,

New arrival

RABBITS

(CHICKS SOlD IN L01S Of I OILY) .

lruslratlng

because of a . failure to use these

6212; 'Margaret Ejlwards,~
· 2535,
cafeteria.
and Carolyn McDaniel,
742.
by pannta for the enjoyment ri
Although. the major respon· · Dorothy OUver is faculty junior
Junlon and llllllon ri Meigs High sibllllies for · pronHIIght activities class sponsor.
School IIlii their guests at the annual are traditlonaUy 88SIIIIIflll by junior
llmiCHIIIiot prom on May 9;
pannta, both parents of juniors and
·"WW a. recent meeting of ~rested seniors are uted to help and Bhould I
, parentl, activllies were acheduled receive a donation request from ·1 Mr. and Mrs. Eugene llusciJe1. the
·, lor the evening and will iilclude: acbool thla week. Allo, 110me area former Beth Sexton, Mt V ' , are
beginning at 4 p;m. the auditorium merchanla will be asked to belp announcing the birth of lbelr tjecond
will be open for parentl who would spODIOI' these events, as wen.
child, a 11011, David Eugene,
like to see the pr1111 deeorallons;
General chalnnan for prom night April7ataMt V~'*PI
from 8 to 10 p.m., a buffet will be events is Judy Croc!U, 992-2704. Per- . infant weighed slz pounds,
pmtded in the acbool cafeteria: sons intereated in helping who are ces and was.J l inc:heiiiCIIi,hn 5 to 10 p.m. pei'ICIIIIIel ol The not contacted in any other way, are
Davld Eugene Will 110m ~ the
Pbolo Place, will be laking prom asked to caU Mrs. Crvob andvoiUD- · ,.JeCOOCI birthday ol hilllister, Man.Jicture1 In the audltoriwn lobby; the leer. Other C(IIDIJijUee chairmen of dy, and the 113rd birthday
hil
prom Ia from I to 12 midnight 8nd the parents group are Marie Bir- great-grandmother, Mrs. .
I
frilm 12 midnlglit to 3 a.m. at pizza · chfleld, 70.2178; Pat Kitchen, 9117, Hayea, S)T8CUII!. &amp;fn.
puty ·will be held with mualc and
ber brother were also born
same date. David is the
infant born into the Rulchel ~tlb
for30yean~
·
'
· Mrs. ~ Seaton, Mt. venjon.la
the matemal grandmother. Tbe;

,Both a (II~ om buffet and a post·

Aprii1S,l981
Success In your chosen field is
likely this coming year, but you may
have to work harder than usual in or~; ;~i::•ln it. B~ prepared to pay
ARIES (Much 21-Aprll 19)
Coworkers are likely to have their
-own problems today, so be careful
not to lay any extra burdens on
them . Yours may be the straw that
breaks the camel's bac k.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Don't
take too seriously today things
' meant to be fun . Making a few bum
shots In tennis shouldn't be allowed
to spoil your whole day.
GEMINI - (Mlly 21·June 20) Your
staying power may not be up to par
today. Too many dlslractions will
get you. off·course .and 1nh1blt your
will to finish what you start.
CANCER (June n -July 22) Stand
up for what you believe In today; but
don't deliberat~IY Introduce con , troversy Into your disCUSSIOns. The
lesssaidthebetler.
.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22l Normally
you are very generous, bu( today
you may not be too eager to share
with others things they had a hand In
helping to bring '•bout.
VIRGO !Aug. 23-Sept. 22lBe very
careful today businesswlse and
financially especially with persons
you feel ha~e stung you In the past.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) f7 one
who is usually laclfut and
in

pressed enthusiasm about ~r!' .
Refeshments of sandW:' ch s,
cookies, nuts, coffee and p
w re
served from tables decora
th
spring flowers and pas
cCeBBOries by Mrs. Sarah
wl r.
Guests were from the Rae Bliptill!, Heath United Methodist Church, the Middleport First p~ted
Presbyterian Church, and f\'!Ount
Moriah Baptist Church, Mlddl~rt.
Mrs. Metzger presided~~ punch bow.! and assisting with
ser·
ving and cleanup were · Hall,
Mrs. Sarah Owen, Mrs. M~er,
Mrs. Eva Hartley, Mrs. Bernice
Baker, Mrs, Alwilda Werner! Mrs.
Brewer, and Mrs. Freda Hood.

Smith

ASTRO
GRAPH

prclll pizza party will he sponsored

III!O.'OETAI. IUO

GUINEA PIGS, HAMSTERS, GERBILS, PARAKEPS,
FINCHES AND TROPICAL FISH

DemOI!key.
.New officers nominated by Mrs. ·
AIwilda Wemer, Mrll. Katheryn
Metzger and Mrs. Teunna Well
were Mrs. Clara bell Riley,
prealdent; Mrs. Well, treasurer;
Mill Hall, vice president of
ml88ions; and Mrs. Metzger, viee
president of leadership develop.
ment. Mrs. Slavin and Mrs. Cathy
Riggs were named chairmen of the
Dorcas and Elect&amp; Circles.
Speaker at the tea ·was Luisa
Teatinl from Terrara, Italy, a
Rotary exchang~ student ·residing
with Mt, and Mrs. John Gresham,
New Mexico, W.Va. while attending
high school at Wabama·. She gave an
aCCOijllt of her life in Italy and ex·
t

A layette shower was held recenUy honoring Mrs. Jo Ann Smith at
. the Letart FaliB community hall
Hosting the shower were Karen Connolly, Joyce Riffle, Edith Manpe~·
Vickie Cundiff and Teri Roush.
Games were played with prizes
going to Eileen . ~h, S~e
Richmond and S)llrley Dugan. The
door prize was won by Margaret
Rose. Refreshments of cake, mints,
chips, kookaid' and coffee were ser- ·
ved to Beatrice 'Blake, Charlotte
Nease and Ryan, Missy Riffle,
Carrie ~~ Hill, Shirley
Dugan and Eriea, Tammy Hill, Ger·
trude Neigler, Diana Rose, Gladys
Shields, Ann Findley, Debbie Neillon
and · Jamie, Suzanne Richmond,

diplomatic, you could find yourself

Parents to sponsor pre-prom buffet
-

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EASTER

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LOST

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MAJI CONOihOI._

.MALE SCHNAUZER, answetS to name of Shultz,
:dark grey.

'Tile 81Ulual fellowship lea of the B.
H. Sanborn Miuionary Society of
tile Middleport First Baptist Church
.JMll held recently with guests from
aeveral area churches.
, ,Tbe organ prelude was by Jarilce
~llllts with "When MOI'ning Gilds the
lliies" being sWig by the group. Miss
~HaD welcomed members and
ctJesls, and for devOtions, Mrs.
Helen Bodlmer ol the Dorcas CirCle
di8cullled the life of Jesus from Ills
birth to Ills resurrection. There
were appropriate scr!ptures from
Luke and Matthew with prayer.
Mrs. Mary Brewer had the love gift
cledlcatlon and was aasiBied by
Ellz.abeth Slavin and Mrs. Lillian

~

ELECTRONIC
HEARING
. TESTS

Bend a~ will be represented ners will be arinounced at the senior
by Doli Salmons; Racine; Robert play. An art show is also scheduled
Smith, Pomeory, and Tom Rose, for that time with high school
Middleport, at the Council meetings, students to dill play their sketches
the nen one to'be held April 'l1 at Rio and qrawings completed wider the
Grande.
I
direction of Rebecca Circle and Nan· tru
Plans ·wei announced for two cy Yoac hum, voIunlee~ 108
ctors
tours of !he Marietta Museum art fortheSEOVACArtiBt iii theSchooiB
show, one be~ on April30, and the programs. The public is invited to
other on Ma~ 3. Members or others a ttendthe PIa~ and a rt actiVI'ti. es.
interested in taking a tour are asked
Future prOJects of BORA mclude
to contact Janet Koblentz, 98l).3847, an art show during Regatta, art
Robert Smith, ~. or Rebecca stimulation and appreciation in area
.
.Circle, 949-2517. •
schooiB, and a membership fund
It was noted that Salmons is drive. Dues for active members re
currenUy directing the senior play $12 a year in monthly installments of
at Southem High School. to be ••J permember t o be pal'd at the monpresented on May 1. A poetry contest thly meetings. ~on-active members
is Wlderw.ay with a ·prize of $5 to be and patron dues will be $1S a year.
.
.
..
offered the top · winner by the Donations
are also bemg solicited.
association. ]I f · enough Interest is
A prototype constitution for BORA
. shown, a second and third prize will is currenUy being studied by Robert
be awarded. Judge for the poetry Smith and BeIsY Stivers. Rebecca
contest will be Robert Fox and win- ·Circle has been appointed as ternporaryreporterforthegroup.

Members of seve·ra/ area churches
attend B. H. Sanborn Society tea

....

•

the first Miller walked, followed by
an error to put two on. After a
sacrifice Jamie Miller fanned the
next two batters.

Two persons.honorees of showers

Partm

In recent softball action Meigs
-~ ,. AEQ. RET. $1.59
claimed one win and lost two to op. . ~- l .
ponents Athens, Logan, and
. - ,_
Jackson.
2G-ct.
Against Athens, Beth Perrin and
Robin Buffington got the only two
Meigs hits in
26-0 loss to the
Bulldogs.
Pam Crooks, April King, Natalie ,
Lambert, Mel Dillard, and Jamie
Acree each had singles in a 9-2 loss
to Logan. Logan scored seven runs
in the fiflh ori four walks and three
hits. Natalie Lambert was on the
IIEG. RET. 11.11
mound for Meigs with 10 walks and
four strike oitts.
, ·
Meigs then came back to a ~ win
NOLIIMAl, DRY Ofl OLY
over SEOAL foe Jackson. Pam
·crooks, Jamie ,o\cree, Cindy.Crooks,
and April King had two singles each.
Meigs had 13 hits and one error.
Meigs is now 2-5 overall.

Ph. 992·5776 Syracuse, Oh.
NOW OPEN .FOR
SPRING SEASON
• Potted Plants
• Complete line of bedding
plants and hanging
·
baskets.
All Dozen Packs .nc doze

Th ~_Q~ily ~t:ntinei-Page-5

The adventures ,of Albert E. Mouse . Layette shower for Mrs.

. :" I,
'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

· The Mouse in the library

"

ROCK SPRiNGS . ~ The Meigs
Marauder ga!B dropped a 2-1
decision here Monday against
· Waverly.
Pam Crooks and Jamie Acree had
the only Meigs hits. Meigs scored fir- .
st in the second when Aplil King
reached on an error, went to third on
an Acree single, .then stole home. ·
In the fourth Waverly's Robin
Thomas reached on an error and
scored on a double by Sexton. In the
seventh Robertson singled, stole
second and third, then scored on a
double by Wroten. Robertson had
two singles to lead Waverly.
Lambert had six strike outs and
six walks, pi~hing for Meigs:

HUBBARD'S
GREENtOJSE

_____. - - -- - - - - ·-,··--

- - - -.___:___

Tuesday, Apri114, 1911 . .. ' ·

Waverly
edges
Meigs

:church captured runner-up spot in the Meigs County

.:-----

tips on . t~/svision

TobllpAIIIIrlclillqaotuallni
blllltllllll tbelr '-ltll ID awBJ 11111,

SUPPLY

11...,
• ...........,
1JOUB.TY
M• -__. .,....,_
""""''.. ~· • "Ill

, .......,, Olllo

~rr•:;;•.:=:.\".:d

OF STUFF" - FOR

SM,LL AN'"'~'"·.,,

'

J

:..._ ! ,._..,. at 1:41 p.m.'
..... "'-"1Aprll7.
..

'

l'he Village -'f Middleport will. hold two
"'' L
public hearings, ""onday, April 20, 1981, 7:30
P.M., and Monda~, Aprll27, 1981, 7:30P.M., at
Village Hall, 237 RICe Street, ·Middleport, ·
before submiSSiOII ,. I final application to .
HUD for a Com~W~itv Development Block
Grant.
Citizen Input
use ofT funds will be
solicited at theae m tlngs. he public Is In· ·
vitld to attend an~ offer input. Commenfs can
also be made bywtltten letter to the mayor.
1

':L

Diesel ever sold in this area.
On April' ·2, 1981 Volkswagen did it again as
Alva Ma1heny purchased his second V~ W. Rabbit Dies~l. Who can blame him w1th EPA
Estimates like this:
42EPAEST. MPG
56HIGHWAY
"Let Us Help You Start Your Own Tradlti~n"

RIVERSIDE V.W
UpiH'r lllvt•r Rd

'

/IIIIi 9800

(,.tl!q" 1,,

•

�_____ ______
..

.;,P:a~s:•:·:6=T=he::o:a:il~y~S~e:n:ti~n:e:l===================P~o:m:e:r:o:y=M~i=dd=le:p:o:r:t,:O:h:io==============;:====::;:==:::T:u:•:s:d:•:.Y·~A=p~r:l:l:'4:,:'"~'- :;

- - -.

------·---·-

'

'

--

.OI&lt;X 'n\AcY

front, I to r, the Rev. Robert·McGee, the Rev. Willlam
Mlddleswartb, Pastor Albert Dlttes, tbe Rev. Robert
R~bloson, the Rev. Robert B. Graves; blick, llo r, the
Rev. Uoy4 Grimm, tbe Rev. Floyd Shoot and tbe Rev.
Mark Flynn.

'

VIewmg

service or any portion thereof. They
are asked to enter and leave during
the singing of hymns if they arE
unable to attend the entire service.

·Several clubs meet locally
Martha Bible Class
_ BRADBURY - Donations to the
,.!}rundy Mountain Mission and the
'()hio Valley Christian Assemby were
i. made when the Martha Bible Class
' inet this week at the Bradbury
..PJurch of Christ.
: • Easter services were discussed
.: and it was noted that Randy Haynes
~)If Lancaster will be the guest
tlJpeaker. Lilies will be purchased for
: tbe church by the claJiS for Easter,
:' and flowers will also be provided for
::Mother's Day. The church
. re&lt;lecoration project was discussed.
A card was signed for Wilbur Han' ning, a patient at the Holzer Medical
Center.
· ~ · . Paula Haynes presided at the
" · meeting and gave the devotions
'using a reading, "My Son, My
Saviour." Paul Darnell had the

closing prayer, and Dan and Karen
Meadows served refreshments of
cake and coffee. others attending
were Mrs. Paul Darnell, Elisha
Meadows, Kathy Jolmson, Pauline
Hudson, and Bill and Naomi King.

Youth class meets
POMEROY-Youth of the First
Southern Baptist Church of
Pomeroy gathered Saturday night at
the home of the Rev. and Mrs
William Newman for a pizza party.
Mrs. Newman, leader of the youth,
led the group in playing games and
making their own pizza.
It was noted that there will be a
youth evangelism retreat at Dayton
on April 17 and 18. Transportation
will be provided to any young people
who want to attend, and further information can be obtained from

Rev. w. H. Perrin, the Revs. Floyd
Shook, Robert Graves, William Middleswarth, Mark Flynn, James
~roome, Stanley Merrifield, Albert
ljliUes, and Richard Thomas. .

~n Ap~l
Mrs. Newman, 992-3426.
Attending the party were the Rev.
~nd Mrs. Newman and Brenda,
ScoU Stout, Julia Spencer, Gerald
Spencer, Karen Spencer, BUly Mctiure, ·Jayne Hoeflich, Clinton Tur·
ner, Charmelle Turner, Denise Tur·
ner, Usa Allen, and Lisa Parsons.
The youth meeting is held every
Sunday evening at 6:15p.m.

Scouts have display
Scouts of Middleport Troop 1039
arranged an Easter display at the
Pomeroy Health Care Center Wednesday afternoon. At a meeting of
the troop Tuesday afternoon at tbe
home of Mrs. Joy Clark, leader,. tbe
girls finished decorating Easter
eggs. Kim Stewart and Amy
Luckeydoo served refreshments and·
the cookie sale results were

'

THINK
ANVO~E WOULD
Bfi.I!VE SUCH

A PAIIITASTIC
STORY 'I'

lUI"

~~~lli~M'{
~'1- 6t£{1'H(;)\'( MID 'bLI

OO,l OIDt.I'T... I'~ ~

~aY~!

~100'-b!R~
61~TIU»,'( FOR ~ P.a5r
1\1~~.

ANNIE

1- I CO\iLDH'T
LET YOU 6E

·· AHD YOU
THOU6HT

EXPOGED AG THE

r-'r-':.,.../ 5ACitlFICING

"61UlY A'A:H6ER:'
OR. LIXIR -

YO!!ft

CA!iEE~

~OULO HELP ME ?
THAT NAGSTUPID.'

fliscll88ed.

Rock Springs Grange makes
donatiot:ts
.

'
~; A contribution. was made to tbe
E~ :Ohio Society for the Prevention of

a legislative report, and it was noted "Mter Winter God Sends the
that the annual Grange banquet will Spring" ·by Ray Whaley, and
• Blindness when the Rock Springs be held on April 24 with tickets "Spring is Here" by Rosalle Story.
:...... Grange met at the hall. Hemlock available from the subordinate There were two contests and a
: Grange members were visitors to masters. Mrs. Lucille Ieifheit was hwnorous style review with Bernice
;--· the meeting which was preceded by reported lll.
" Hawk, Sarah CullWIIB, Golda Reed;
~-·· .a potluck dinner attended by apA-program on spring was presen- Leota Smith, Silvia Midkiff, Naomi
, proximately 60.
ted by Mrs. Muriel Bradford, lee- Reed, Margaret Hanning, Doris
The oatmeal cake and appliance · turer of Hemlock Grange. The Eastman, and Helen Quivey taking
• cover contests were announced for group sand "Let Me Call You part. The Grange pep song con:--·· the May meeting. Bill Radford gave Sweetheart" with readings being eluded the meetlng.

!--·

fil

New arrivals

.'r·
•
'

:_.

MeLAUGID.JN

:
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
;--- Duane McLaughlin are announcing
L.lhe birth of a daughter, Dennise
1 • .Marte, born Tuesday at the Langley
Air Force ~Hospital in Newport
New~~, Va. The infant weighed seven
· pounds, 11 ounces and was 20 inches
long.
.
Mr. and Mrs~ McLaughlin have a
.;11011, J111011, two. Maternal grand' perenta are Mr. and Mrs. Fred
I!Willlam8on, Rutland, and the maternal greai-grandparen!B are Mrs.
. Edith Willlam8on and Mr. and Mrs.
RD)&gt; McCool, Kettertn8. The pa"rnal grandparenlll are Mr. and Mrs.
, Kenneth Mct.ughlin, Pomeroy, and
the paternal great-grandmother is
1Mrs. DOria Hotelllng, Alvada, whlle
.Mrs. Susan Pnisler, Sparta, Mich.,
~·II a paternal great-great·
~

_--r
1.

YEAH, RIGHT'...
l 60T A
MESSAGE FOR
HEft FfWM

I'IARBIJCKG
HIMSELF! ...

DELACRUZ
" Mr. and Mrs. David De Lacruz,
Reedlville, announce tbe birth of

AU.EYOOP
WHO WAS
11-IA.T ON

• lHE~E,

DOC.

b

Middleport Amateur Gardeners make
announcement of May .4 meeting

His name is

-___, Rover?

ton, regional horticulture chainnan,
will present the program. .
The May meeting will be at the
home of Mrs. Everett Taylor, ~
coin Heights.
Mrs. Allee 'lbompaon, Deco Plants
representative, gave a demonstration on soU free planting' and
displayed new cootaJners /with
moisture level Indicators. The
traveling prize wu given to Mra.
Fetty. Mrs. TlmlpiiOII, Enna Smith
aDd Mrs. Edward Burkett recel~
door prizes. Mrs. Fetty and Mrs.
Harry Davi,s ~ mresbmertta.
Favors were crocheted ralilll!&amp;-

.

..

M1.1 po' doq, Rover.

die jes' b'fore th'
boy were born!

their fl.n!t child, Jliltin David, March 22, at St. Joeeph HOIJIIIal
Parkersburg.
The infant weighed aeven ~.

fin

It seem liil.e th'
This is
What a
chile weresentt'me Gretchen! pecul'ar
from heaven t' fill
name fer
po' or Rover's Dl&lt;lcl?ll
a chile!

WINNIE
THE MI~SIONA~II;S
WHO ~AI5EO ME I.EP ME'

L--- ""-- TO BELIEVE

iltAT.

.

.Surveys show ___; fear of crime_haunts busm~

NEW YORK (AP) - More than rA pOwerlessness In coping with the tences discouraie Crime, ~ i
half tbe executives fi-om the 43 per- effects !lf crime on ~ Uves, the with only 52 percent of ~ ~~
cent of Fortune'lin! companies with corporate conununity has taken an . pubUc, and 90 percent of the
overseas ties to countries where aggteasive stand on lmplt~jpenting executives believe that the dea~
terrorist aUacks occur e&amp;pre88 security rneuures both on their own penalty discourages_murder, com. strong kidnapplrig concerns ac- behalf and on that of their com- pared with 1111 percent of II»
cording to a recent national s:U.Vey panies.
American public u. ~e. Flna11t: .
which explored the responses of . Fifty·three percent of Fortune ~ther group has IIKICb ~
senior executives from these com- lin! executives secure their homes IR the U.S. priiiOIIay.tam, Ninety•
panieslofearofcrime.
with burglar alanna and similar ninepercentoftopeleCIIIiveund80
eight ounces and was 21 inches long.'
About tw~thlrds of the executive! safety measures. More than 01111 In per~ of the public feel the~
Grandparents are George He1181ey, have Installed Intensive security four have unlisted nwnbers and are Ineffective In rebabliitatintj
Phoenll, Arizona; DolO!'eiJ King, programs; and 'an even higher 73 keep tbe location of tbelr houses COJ)o crimlnala.
·
,
VIenna, W. Va., and the great- percent maintain a staff security · fldential. More than 01111 in three
:
grandparents are· Mr. and Mrs.' specialist in place.
var)o dallY routes to work and, wben · The fear ol violent crime lnd lack'·
Everett Schultz, Tuppers Plains;
The study "The Flggle Report, travellilg, 01111 in lour check their of faith In the julllkeaYJtem has, ac.;
and George Hensley, Sr., Long Bot- Part II, The Corporate Response to hoteli'OOIIllforpoulblelntruders.
'cOrdlDg to the findiMI If "rile:
tom. Mrs. Lola Griffin, Tuppers Fear of Crime," found that 81
To proteCt their corpcntlona, · F~Report,"tumedln~ajorityct
Plaint, is a great-great·
repreaentatives ol 111Ultlnational theSe executives allo tab 8lttlltdve American bomee 1111J hllli' ~·· a JD.1
grandmother.
corporations which play an U.. precauUona.
than three of . to armed fwt1
1, wttb inore ~
fluential, highly villble role In their every five ccmparlill bin blqlu'. half of the JNblli: at large
host countries, theae senior alanlll and eledrlc lloodllgN!q. adnowllllll•tbeJmalntalnftrear.,
GILKEY ·
necutives are seen u per· Half have au1om1t1c: ll8bt timen1 rna 1111' the protection ol tbeui
Mr. and Mrs. RD)&gt; Gilkey, Route I, aonlflcatlona of their CCllllpiiiY and and clOiiiMkiieodt lllmaioll. Abell&amp;· rwldlt'OIII
:
Middleport, are 8IIJIOWICinll the bir- 1111 poUcl-. Thia politlon leaves two In .live lllve eletbGnlc lden1
th ol their ~ child, Kelly them with a ~ of tlflllatilll sylteml and 1111-ln bJr
~toliiCIMfeucuttveaf· '
Mlcbelle, born· on Feb. 10 at the wlnerabUlty beca111e a t1dnapping have anned gurda.
llcer, Hlrr7 E. Flgle Jr., A·T~
Pleuant VIIIey H01PitaL The U.. Clll oecur 111most inyUme Cll'
Since top eucatiftl Ylft IJIIm. IDe. • •ed U.. lltadill 111 tha •
fant weighed aeven poUnda, 11 ouo- anywhere.
MIYII u prima tarptl, IIIey are elhcll af ~ c:riml 111 AmerlciD
cee and wu 2ilnclie. long.
In ·CGIIlPIJIIII that do 11111 ._ve :even man CCIICelllld IbiD II lbe ' llflll1111 to aw llle COijiGi•
Maternal grandparenll 'are llrong- bondll,llll11bout. 1-raJ public lbaallbe tlnl&amp; af WGdd llld .. . . IJIIIII1c
Delorea Powell ot Mlddlepor( and qlll11er of thl1r aecut~... vQc8 crlmund tha falhn af lila a bakiaJ ll&gt;&amp;wllw bJ Ghllltiiii.4 that u. •.
the late Earl Powell, and the Pl&amp;er- 1imllar kidnapping concerns. JIIIIIce .,._ III dial 111111 IIIII ....- cl ert1111 01111 ill ._l«iw ·
nal grandpuenta are Mr. and Mrs. Nf!lriY lour oat c110 rartune 1000 U..L '1'111111111' qll • tn •••
U.. • m 1tw
Herschel Gilkey, Middleport. Mrs. aec:a~~ an diltwt J a11o1t the IIIID U.. _.. IJIIl ID ;;rrt wbstbw .. m ••a.~~~m '
Clara Gikey, Middleport, ila pater- pouJhiiJtyof•~n~~~au.dl•pklll pwJIIIw r
a • • 11•1" aflrKafUt fikc•lbeW~Jto
nal great-p-anclmother, Mr. and CdrjiGi'llejll$11'11.
. QllllafCCEJ~e"'.lllldDI.
CGJ*IIII t IIQ 11111 • fw af
Mrs. Gilkey ._ve a 11011, Roblie, .,.
UnUb lbe a-raJ pablle, In an
pa ill
lillie=. IWIII'ftJIOIIII_..'
three. .
. . , . . ,. . . . .,.• • • _
lqh
, . . fell till&amp; .... . . . . . .,.
.

c-.-

Infant DelAcruz

._llmll&amp;...,

...

fl......

I:J&amp;bb••

(

I

.

1

5AJ...E5MAN AND
HIS CUSTOMER.
Now arrange the c~rcled leners ·to
form the surpnse answer, as sug·
gesled by the above cartoon .

Mswerhere. r I I J[ I I I I 1 I J
(Answers tomorrow )

Yesoe 1day

1979

161 ALLIN THE FAMILY
lfl&lt;HJ GI FAMILVFEUD
l i i TV HONOR SOCIETY
Q (J I TICTAC DOUGH
MACNEIL·~EHRER
I I I lj)l
REPORT
il.9l NEWS
7:30 I]) I) BULLSEYE
W SANFORO AND SON
fl)CJ(fl JOKER'S WILD.
11 ) HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
lUi mJ DICK CAVEn SHOW
Guest s: James Wol cott and Clive

!

5

!

Jumbles LADLE POIS.E AVOWAL ERMINE
Answer Protection when about to do " d irty work." OVERALLS

Jumble Book No. 16, conlalni~ 110 puules. is available tor S1 .7S poetpald
hom Jumble, rJo this newsptper, Be»:l4, Norwood. N.J. 07641. lnctudt your
name. addreaa , .r:ip coda and make checks ~yabte to NewspapttbOOka.

BRIDGE
Rapid play downs con!ract

James, Pan 11.
lml MATCH GAllE
11}) 11) FACE THE MUSLC
7 :58 ( f) CBN UPDATE NEWS
8 :00 12l iJ I1) DAF~Y DUCK'S EA5TERSHOW Dafly sta rs in three new
can oons : ' The Yolks On You ,' in
which Prissy lays a golden egg ;
' The Chocolate Chase, ' in which
Daffy pla~s · the guard at a fa ctory
where chocolate Easter bunnies
are made ; and 'Daffy Goes Nor1h,'
m wh ich the determined duck
learns some hard lessons when he
decides to hitchhike North instead
o r flying . (Repeat)
131 HERITAGE SINGERS
I S) NIGHT GALLERY
IB I(fj )OJ HAPPY DAYSFonzieand
Roger join for c es t o save Cha chi
I rom a smooth talking college a cout
who oilers the budding basketball
sta r a shaay scholarship he can 't
refuse.
11J fl] ®J PALMERSTOWN A llu
ep1demic sweeps into Palmer·
stown be co ming e harbinger of
aeath and ot violence, directed
against ttle town's first Ch lnel8
family, who many accuSe of carry ·
1~ the virus with them . (60 mins.)
( f ) NOVA ' The Sea Behind th e
Dunes ' One year in the intricate lire
of a coasta l lagoon unfolds when
Nova doc ument s the fragile tidal
eco -system which supportsthe et1 ·
11re ocean. (Closed -Capt ioned; U.·
S.A.) (60 mins.)
[11) 1
WOLPER
SPECIALS
· s~~burlil ' slincoln ' (PART%)
B:30 riJ jU C!J BERENSTAIN BEARS'
EASTER SURPRISE Little Brother
Be~.r , young member of the B~ar
IBJily , l earns the true meaningot
Ea ter at a time when the arrinl of
1
'ng and Easter are delityed , in
thl
riew animated
musical
s_p cial .
1~1
NEWS
!1l BASEBALL Atlanta Braves vs
Ho stan Astros
rlJ IDLAVERNEANDSHIRLEY
II ' a rocky , ro llicking situation
wh n laverne and Shirley·hoat a
su rise party tor Laverne ' s pop ,
Fr nk,who 'sforgottenhiswedding
an iveraary to Edna.
8 :581 (}) CBN UPDATE NEWS
9 :00 12li iC!J BJANDTHEBEARWhen
aruthlesstrucking outlillrieato put
BJ out ot business, he hires aever1
b·eBul iful but bold female truck
drivers to help him deliver deadly
cargo . (Repeat: 2 hrsJ
l} j 700CLUB
lll .MOVIE ·ICOMEOY)" "Odd
Ani!!I Shot" 111711
,
,
['f llltl. THREE'SCOMPANY
11J (Jl ®J PETER AND PAUL The
drama chronic le s the saga .of
Pet er, the rock of the Christian
Church, and Paul ofT ar sus, Apostle
to the Gentiles, and conc ludes in
Rome w1th the beheading of Paul
and the cr~cilixlon of Peter. Stare:
Anthony Hopkins, Robert FoJI · ·
worlh . (Conclusi on ; 2 hrs .)
(J) Ill) MYSTERY! 'Tho Rac ing
Game, Parl111: Horaenap' When a
celebrity racehorse is stolen after
making a highly publicized appear ance, it becomes quickly apparent
that a caah ransomian 'tthareaaon
behind the
crime . (Closed·
Caplioned ; U.S .A.) (60 mina.)
9: 3~ Clli121. TOOCLOSEFORCOIIFORT Panic etrikeat he Au ah tamll~
when Jackie brings home
S 100,000 in cash because of a mix
· up at her bank , but the real BJICI·
teiment begins when two former
convictaworkingat the house learn
, about the loot. (Repeat)
10:00 l])(l)J.HARTTOHART Jonolhan
i s disguised u a sh ip's ste'ourd
and Jennifer poses as a aeductive
countess, whentheHartaaet sail on
a glamorous snip In a wild acheme
to crack a counterfeiting ring. (80
mina.)
·
(fJ SHERLOCK HOLMES AND
DOCTOR WATSON
® NEWS
10:2!J C1J CIN UPDATE NEWS
10:30 ffi SOUND OF TRUMP!TS
l~ ADOLFHITLER: PORTRAITOF
A TYRANT Wllh lho holp of OKCIU·
1ive film footage, HBO presents 1
powerful portr ail of a power·crazed
main . Hal Holbrook hosts thl.s facln ·
aling documentary .
(f]ULLIANHELLMAN:~PROFILE

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

NORTH

.KI0653

.9.7

South wasted no thought on
trick one. He knew tha t aces
were invented to take kings
and he look his ace of

.AKQID82

WEST
.A 71
• A6 3 2

diamond s.
Th ere-

was

considerabl e

EAST
• J 982

• 51

tKQJ104

thought before the play to
trick two. Finally. South
ruffed a diamond and led a
spade to his queen. West produced the ace and played his
ace of trumps and cashe&lt;l,lwo
high diamonds.
·
"Y.ou had the wrong hand.
partner," said South.
" Not. exactly ." replied
North. "I had the wrong
partoer."
North was right. South mu st
make an un~sual play at trick

+5

• 952

+7&amp;13
SOUTH

.Q
.KQJI0!7
• A 863

tJ9

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

one and refuse to take it.

If West leads a trump.
South can clear the trump suit
while still in control of diamonds and may even ~et an
overtrick if West doesn l take
his ace of spades
If West leads a club at trick
two. South wins in his hand.
ruffs a low diamond in dummy and plays a spade to his
queen and West's ace. Eventually. South will get to chuck
his last low diamond on the
king of spades or a hi~h club

1-I1·11

Wesl

Noro~

2t

It
2•

Pass

Pass

Easo
Pass
Pass
Pass

South

1•
1•

Opening lead:•K

and lose just the first trick
and two aces.
If West leads a second
diamond. South ruffs in dummy and leads the spade. Once
more he will be able to discard hls last low diamond.

;ooo

'

the club.
Members related garden. plans 10
response to ron call with Mrs. Eddie
Burkett givlrig devotions from
Easter Ideals, "What is Spring?"
and "Friends."
·
Officers' reporta were given by
Mrs. Harry Moore and Mls8 Bernice
Ann Durst. A communication was
read regarding the regional meeting .
to be held at Hamden May 18 with
clubs of Vinton County to be hosts.
An invitation w81 read from the
Middleport Garden Club inviting
membel'll to attend their neJt ·
meeting at the home of Mrs. Lennie
Haptonatahl when Mrs. Macel Bar-

t
rJ _j

IABNER_N

IT'S !EiWEEN /HE

sP

..

.
I

BARNEY

FIT AS
I'LL MAIL
A FIDDLE, LOWEEZV·· IT TO 1/E,
THAT'LL BE THREE
DOC
OOLLERS

HOW ABOUT
TATER'S
LOLL't'POP?

I

VOU KNOW
WHAT I'M
THINKIN'?

~MJ.~td
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Say ouch

I Fireplace

5 Dignified title
debris
10 Fish
ZLeek's kin
. 11 "-among a 3 Being

thousand ... "
13 Honey of

in readiness
4 Happy place

a place
5 Province
14 Cash in Mexico of Italy
15 Demonstrates 6 tiqueur
17 Slower (mus.) flavoring
18 Legis. mem. 7 Hideaway
19 Substitute
8 Mailer's
for ~~you"

" An - "

Yesterday's Alllwer
2%0nce Z8 Himalaylin
blue
cedar
moon
30 The Indicated
3Z OutiandJ8h
23 Shinto
33 Register :
temple
36 Roper of
24 Fight
the polls
off
38 Canary
Z5 15olated
or cat, e.g.
21 Appear

Make
9 Connubial
double
12 Put into
Zl Lollobrigida
writing
· Z3 Shoo, Monis ! 16 Tulti.frutti
Z4 Queen (Fr. )
holder
N Flsalle rock r-"T.:""-r;"-r.'2'1 Sicilian city
Z8 Watergate
witness
Z9 UtUe
ZQ

=

'P''"T.'-,.:--r::--r.:--

lady
. II Duffer's

lteni
31 Distaff
cottontail
M Theory '
adllerent
35 Diamond feat
S7 On a slant
:1!1 Latvian
10 - Wright
41 Sha!Jks' 42 Stop
43 Hebrew
measure

=

The noted author recollect• her
tong rtlalionahip with writer 01·
ahiell Hammel and ex. plaine how
• Hammetinlluenced her writing. She
descrlbu the happy yeara they
apent on H1rd Scrabble Farm, In
Pte•untville, New York .

M-,

grandmother.
Mr. and Mrs. McLaughlin reside

at 2302 Shell Road, Hampton Mobile
vvillage 115, Hampton, Va.

chlldren, John and Stella Bass. Susan, Mary, Paula and Becky1
Chrissie and Steve, Dexter; Jack Winebrenn.er, Thunnan, Jr.,
and Lenora Offenberger, Rodney Gearldine and Harvey Martin,
and Robyn, UtUe Hocking; Barbara · James and Thelma Miller, Mary
Bearhs and Mark, Syracuae; Roy Pickens and Scott GruesP• ,
and Cherri Rinehart, Kristin and Syracuse.
.
Mindy, Mansfield; Dave Ba8s,
N
and Glady&amp; ~ey,
Roanoke, Va., and Clyde and Debbie · Porilien/.i; J
e and Darla'
Triplett, Wendy and Adam, Cline,
e ; Ryan and Sue Cline
.
; Mike, KaY, and'
Syracuse.
Others at the party were tbe Rev. Tim Ryan, and Pbll Bearbl, Racine;
and Mrs. James B. Kittle, Hazel Elladene WaiiiOII and Deanna SumHayes, Louise and John Frank, inerfield, Minersville, and Angie
Maggie Winebrenner, Gordon, Barton, Roanoke, Va.

J I I·J

me m

YOU

MAN:

7: 3() p.m. at Heath.

6:00 I}) D f!l iD ()) I!DJ&lt;HJID N!WS
I])
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(CONTINUED FROM DAYTIME)
f!)
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
1.1) ABC NEWS
(f) BEAN SPROUTS
{fi) OVER EASY Guesl: Singer Ao ·
semary Clooney . Host: Hugh
Downs.
(Closed-Captioned;
U.S.A.)
6:30
NBC NEWS
&lt;l:·l BOB NEWHART SHOW
I ~ I EASTER FEVER
'O IIllfQJ CBS NEW$
I 9 I WILD WILD WORLO OF
ANIMALS .
!I U LILIAS, YOGA AND YOU
.
li%) tl ABC NEWS
6 :58 r!1 CBNUPDATENEWS
7 :00 12 )1) PM MAGAZINE
13 )
PROGRAMMING
UNANNOUNCED
10 ) MOVIE -(ORAMAI ''l'oo "J•

CAPTAIN EAsY

PON'T THINK YOU
&gt;;; .CAN SET AWJ!If WITH
51-lOOTING U51 WQ~F·
~AWl THS MOUNTIES
A~WAY~ GET THSIIl.

Eastern sunrise service at 8 a.m.
the following special Holy Week serGood Friday Services - The Everyone welcome.
vices:
Meigs County Ministerial
Morse Chapel, R{lclne - Portland
Maundy ·Thursday- Minersville Association will hold an Ecwnenical
Rd. Good Friday service 7:30 p.m.
United Methodist Church, 7 p.m. Service from noon lo 3 p.m. at tbe
Middleport Heath .United
Holy Conununion with Rev. Stanley Pomeroy United Methodist Church.
Methodist
Church - Thursday
Merrifield.
The service will be centered around evening service with Holy Com. St. Paul United Methodist Church, the Seven Lost Worda.
·
IDWiion 7:30 p.m. This beginf a U.
Tuppers Plains, 7:30 p.m. Service
The Portland United Methodist hour Bible Reading Prayer vigll In
featuring filmstrip on "The Church will present a Passion Play
the church. Good Friday
Passover and Betrayal of Jesus."
at Portland Park at 6:30p.m.
Ecumenical Worship experience In
Morning Star United Methodist
The Forest Run United Methodist the church at 7:3() p.m., hosting the
'Church near Racine will hold ser· Church will hold services Good
town of )'tfiddleporl Eastern Sunday
vices at 7:30 p.m. Rev. "Florence Friday beguining at 7p.m.
Sunrise
worahip 6 a.m. with break·
Snnith,pastor.
·
The Chester United Methodist faSt, also church school 9:30 and
The Racine Charge will hold ser· Chlirch will hold a service at 7 p.m.
vices at 7:30 p.m. at the Racine-- with the youth in charge. Rev. worship 10:30 a.m.
. The ChOir of the Zion ChurCh of ·
Wesleyan United Methodist Church.
Richard Thomas will bring tbe ser- Christ will conduct .an Easlllr
The Pomeroy United Methodist mon.
sunrise program at· 6 a.m. Each
Church wUI hold an Upper Room
T~e Racine--Wesleyan United . member of tbe choir has scripture to
Conununion Service at 7 p.m. Rev. Methodist Church plans a service at
read and Is augmented with' choir
Robert McGee.
7:30p.m.
nwnbers,
solos and trios. Ann LaJn.
The Bethaqy · United Methodist
The Heath United Methodisi Chur· bert is the accompanist and Robert
Church will hold a 2 p.m. Com· ch will host an Ecumenical Worship
munion Service with Rev. Mark Experience at 7:30 · p.m. Churches E. Purtell Is mlnlater and choir
director. Abreakf851 will follow with
Flynn in charge.
participating will include: Pat Arnold 81 chairman assisted
The SuUon United Methodist Chur- Nazarene, · Church of Christ,
ch will hold an 8 p.lit. service of Holy Presbyterian, Baptist, and United with ladies of tbe congregation.
Bible School w1ll foll9'f at 9:30 and
Communion.
MethodiSt.
the morning, worship at 10:30 a.m.
The Heath United Methodist ChurThe Long Bottom · United The choir will bring special music
ch, Middleport, will conduct a Ser: · Methodist Church plans a Comvice of Holy Corrununion at 7:30p.m. munity Good Friday Service at 8 and the mlnister's mesaage w1ll be
, At 8:30p.m., a 24--hour prayer vigil p.m. Rev. Richard Thomas will be in "Looking at tbe Risen Christ." For ·
tbe evening worship at 7 p.m. the
will begin, featuring Bible reading, charge.
youth will have special part In the ·
which will continue until the
Bradford Church of Christ - prOgram and the lllell88ge will be
Ecwnenical Good Friday Service at
"The First Witness."

The May 4 meeting of the Meigs
County Garden Clubs Association to
be held at Trinity Church was announced when the Middleport
ArnateurGardenersmetWednesday
evening at the home of Mrs. Wallace
Fetty. ·
The Fernwood Gat:den Club will be
hosts for the county meeting with the
Middleport Garden Club to presert
the program. Mrs. Roy Holter,
Region 11 director, was the guest
speaker and gave an infonnative
talk on area gardening activities.
She reported on a meeting of the
state board held recently at Granville and was presented a gift from

lour ordinary Words.

EVENING

.
Holy Week services annC!unced

A surprise retirement party was
given for Leonard Bass recently at
the fellowship hall of tbe Syracuse
Nazarene Church. The party was
hosted by his children.
Bass retired from the Foote
Mineral Co. of New Haven where he
had been employed for the past 19
years. His co-workers presented
him with a gift of a bUifold and cash
Ol) the eve of his retirement. ·
AUending tbe party were his wife,
Ora Bass, children and grand-

byHonriAmoldandl!otlLoo:

APR. 14, 11181

!~~?!!.~~~:~~:~!~::~~ Retireme~t fete honors Leonard·Bass
in Pomeroy from 12 noon to 3 p.m.
with the United Methodist Church
hosting the event and under the
sponsorship of the Meigs County
Histoncal Assn.

r!!J ~ ~~ ' .

Unscramble tttese tour Jumbles
one letter to each squire, to torrr1

•

••

'

PLAN- Members of the Meigs County Ministerial
Association completed plans for a Good Friday service
1o be held from 12 noon 1o 3 p.m. at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church when they met Monday at St. Paul's
Lutheran Churcb. Pictured at the plaDDiog session are,

. ftfti~IDl} ~THATSCRAIIILEDWOIIDGAIIE~

Television

Meigs, Mason
Area Ilappenings
Area churches have announced

.

1iJJ TW1UGHT ZOIIE

10:58/
11

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTE = Here'a how to work li.:
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Ia LONGFELLOW
One letter aimply 1tands lor another. In thi1 somp.. A -Ia
used lor the thret L's, X lOr the two O's, etc. Single letter1
apostrophes. the length and formation of the wordo •re ali
hiDts. Each day the code letters are dilerent.

Jl CIN UPOAT! NIWI

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IT SA'f'S THAT IF VOO
DEN'f SOME1liiN6 EXISTS,
IT D&lt;lSN'T EXIST

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C8l LATl!' 110'111

'COLUMBO : A Frltlld In Dtod'

When Holgh C.- klhllla - ·
ho colla II'Oft a to help hlm
• ....,.., ltltoriiM.

•••v•
a
alttlilorHolgh

lturot•ry

T..-.""'
aad
provide an

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GBJK"N

.YesterdaJ'a O.Jl:l;le: YOUR ENEMIES ALWAYS FIND lT
HARDERTO
YOURSIIENCI!:.-ROYLSMml

�-Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

i

Approve $150,000

'

Market report

gran~

TuescfU· Apr1114, 19!1·

Hospital celebrates annivetsary

01110 VALLEY

COLUMBUS - 5t!ite Develop- balance of 36 ~gram 4rators.
ment Director James A. Duerk has
Scope of the project is to provilje
announced approval of a $150,000 U. workers with a ballic o entation to
S. Department of Energy the Weatherization j\ssistance
Weatherization Training and Program and to provide·training of
Technical Assistance Grant to the skills tequired in tbeir job percorporation for Ohio Appaiachian formance. Those skills include inDevelopment (COAD).
sulation of attics and wide walls,
The grant, administered by the caulking, weather-stripping, wrapOhio Department of Economic and ping heating ducts and installation
CommJ;lllity Development (DECO), of stonn windows to inhibit residenwill be used to operate a skills- tial heat loss.
trainin g center for · the
Weatherization Assistance
Personnel trained by ,the project
Program. The center, located in will serve low-income residents of
Athens, is the second such center ·Adams, Ashland, ,_then,s, Belmont,
established by DECO to operate in Brown, Carroll, Coshocton, Gallia,
Ohio.
Guernsey, Harrison, I Highland ,
The Athens center will service 15 Hocking, Holmes, Ja~kson, Jeflocal program operators represen- ferson, Knox, Lawrence, Meigs,
ting community action agencies m Monroe, Morgan, Muskingum,
28 counties in Apr-a]achian Ohio. The Noble, Pike , Perry, Ross,
other center, which opened in Oc- Tuscarawas, Vinton and Washington
tober 980 m Columbus, serviCes the counties.

.

'

KIT

3

·'

LIV1!ll'rot'ri vo.
Mo\UI:T IID'OIIT
Prlceo lken !rom lllo IIIICilori of Salunlly, ~
11. TllliNDS : Veal CIIIYOI -.ty, Cowl llleldy.
Feeder colll' 12 to $1 lqhor,
Tolll-111
Feeder calll" Good and Otolce 1110 to llllllbo.
71-al; 31111 to 4111ilbo. IHI; 41111to llllllbo.IHi; Mil
toiiiiOibl-112-70; 11110 lo 700 lbo.IN7; 711 toiiO .....
!2410;110andover-.
F- He~en : Good and Choico 1110 to 311111k
83-72; 1111110 41111bo. 11·71: 4110 to 1110 lbo. 11.110·
66.50: 500 to•lbl. 50-tl.DO; too to 700lbe. tuOi
700 loiOO lbo. II.!G-.11; 100 and 011er 11-.IQ,
F-r !&gt;WJI: G&lt;IOd and Cbol,.llt to Ill) lbe.
87·75: 31111to41101bo M-77; IOOtolOOibo.!Nl; 500
to IIIlO lbo. 57.1iCH4: IIIII to'IOO lbo. IU'I: 100 10100
lbo.!Wl.IO: IOOandoyeriUI.
Hobtelllsleerund bulla 31XH111111bo. 51.1Hii.
BuliB 1,000 Ibe. ll!ld up 10.-.75.
Slaughter cows- utllitie!J 0 .50-46.2$; canners
and cutlers 35-41.
C...:a~unlla by lhe lwod 4%NIIi.
Sp.UO,er co.. by lhe lwod31o.475.

The . PleaM Valley HOIP!tal · With this IJI'Oif'llll, certain palienbl care Ia not to sUitain the ·penon inHome Health Service celebrated Its may be discharged from Ill!' ~Ita! definitely unleu thli ls absolutely
thlrtl lilllllveraary Friday wjth ' a earlier to recover In tbe com- neceuary. Rather, the pei'IIOnllel
reception 1n the boapltal conference fortable, n!lued atmospbere of provide the physical care and
emolional suppOrt needed to allciw
room. 1
. . bonle.
Home Health care may 'serve u the patient to regain tbe oplimwn
The reCeption was open to the
public and was conducted by mem- an alternative to INiltUtiCINillzed level of health.
bers . of the Home Health Ser.vlce . care. Tbe objective of home bealth
.'
Unit Including Sherry Vickel'8, RN ~year directors --..--,--..;__---'
Awards
for
high
producing
con
',
Coordinator, Diana Riddle, RN
'
·
Romey
Chevalier,
John
Colwell
went
to
Betty
Dean,
John
Payne
and•
Staff, Genevieve Rolllh, Home
'.;
Health Aide and Jody Taylor, Clerk. and Arvtl Holter were elected to Arvll Holter. To Jrin thla awatd, '. ~
,.
More than 100 people attended the three year terins on the Meigs Dairy anipl81s must bave a llfetirhe record
,.
,.
Service Unit Board at the annual of over 4,0QO pounds of butterfat.
reception.
I
Dr. Harry Barr ' of Ohio State
Home Health Service is a program rpeelinl! of the group held recently at
University waa speaker for the .,
offered by Pleasan! Valley Hospital St. Paul's Lutheran Cburch.
Tbe
dairy
aervlce
unit
supervlaes
meeting
and predicted that dairy
as an extension of hospital care or a
,,
the
dairy
testing
program,
plans
the
·cows
will
still be&gt; producing even
supplement to physician follow-upa.
\
annual meeting a1X1 ass1s1s in dairY more nillk per cow in several ye81'8
'•,·
programplanning.
tocome.
:·
' ..
,.

Veal calves, cb01~ and prime~. good 70.

81.
Baby calves7$-25().
Top Hop Sll-lt.75.
Boors $-32.10.
Pigs by the head 17 56.!11.
Sows 4H lbl!!l. and up 34-37.
)

MAY 9~10
Reds ·vs. Houston

Annual Easter egg hunt set Sunday

~ - -

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'
I

."'
. '·"',
~

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, q

IN THE
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO

Ublic Notice

gas and all other minerals
underl yi ng the following
descnbed real estate :
Betng in Bedfor d Township, Meigs County4 Ohio,
and tn Fraction 36, 1 own 3,
Range 3, of the Ohro Com
pann Pur cha se, and
bounded and described as
foll ows, to w1t : Beginning
at the southwest corner of
sa id Fractron 36 ; thence
north foll owrng the west
line of Fraction 36 to the
southwest corn er of George
Hewett's 47 acre tract,
being the northwest corner
of Mary A Lee' s 76 .83 acre
tract; then ce east following
the south line of George
Howett's 47 acre tract to
the center line of the inter·
counl y highway No. 33,
said pornt also bemg the
southeast corner of George
Hewett's •7 acre tract ;
thence 1n a southerly d~re c 1ion following the center
line of rnter county high
way No. 33 to a point where
the Kingsbury Road joins
said tn1'er -county highway
No. 33 in Fraction 36: thence follow ing the center line
of said inter county h igh
way No. 33 1n an easterly
d1rection about 154 feet to
Herb Riggs line ; thence in
a southwesterly direction
following said Riggs ltne
about 178 1eet to the center
o1 the Kingsbury Road ,
thence in a southerly direc

tion rollowing the center
lme of said Kingsbury
Road, said center line
being also along Herb
Riggs west line to the south
RogerW . Davis, et . at,
line of Fraction No. 36 :
Pla intiffs,
thence west along the south
li ne of Fraction No. 36 to
·vsGuy Lee aka Guy W. Lee,
the place o1 beginning, con·
et a l.,
·
ta ining 65 acres, more or
Def endants.
less Sub1ect to a righ( of
way 25 feet w rde, convey.ed
Case No. 17816
NOTICE BY
b( Ray Lee to Guy M . Lee,
PJBLICATION
e al.. as r·ecorded rn Deed
To Pau line Stevens aka
Book 172. Page 563, Meigs
Mr s Robert Stevens, 1f
County Deed Records.
I1V1ng, w hose la st known
Excepting an undivided
three-fourths interest 1n all
add ress was 11 0 Northeast
the coal, oil, gas and all
18th Ave nu e, Boynton
Beach. Flor ida 33435; an d
other minerals In and un·
the unknown he 1rs, next at
derlying satd real estate.
k in, dev1sees, legatees,
E•cepling that pa r t
the1r spouses, 1f any ,
thereof which was taken
execu tor s, admini strators
for highway purposes by
the State of Ohio, Case No.
and assrgns of Pauline
Stevens aka M rs. Robert
14,077, Meogs County Com·
Stevens, if deceased, ad·
mon
Pleas
Cour t,
dress unknown; you are
estimated at three acres,
her eby noti fted that you
more or less.
have been nam ed defen·
Reference Deed : Volume
dan1s 1n a legal act ion en·
241. Page 145 and Volume
ti lled Roger W. Da'lis., et
260, page 937 , Meigs County
al. , plaintiffs, vs. Guy Lee
Deed Records, and the
aka Guy W Lee, et al ,
prayer is thllt the above
defendants. Th is actton has
described real estate be
been assigned Case Numpartitionedi that the in·
ber 17816 and 1S spendtng 1n
terests be set off or ordered
the Court of Common Pleas
sold if it cannot be par·
o1 Metgs County, Pomeroy,
t1tioned ; for an allowance
Oh io45769 .
of attorney fees herein and
The ob1ec1 of the Comcosts.
plaint IS a partt tion action
You are equired to anconc er ning the coa l, oiL
swer the Complaint within
lwenly·eight 1281 days af
r~--------------------1 ter the last pub! icatton of
this notice whi ch will be
1 pubttshed once each week
for si x (6) successive
weeks The last publication
I
.
will be made on May 19th,
1981 , and the twenty eight

They'll Do It Every Time

Public Notice

141 14, 21 , 28 1515, 12, 19, 6tc

14) 14, lie
Public Notice

Public Notice
FINANCIAL
REPORT OF
TOWNSHIPS
For Fiscal Year
Ending December
31 1910
Olive fownshtp
Meigs County
Long Bottom, Ohio
March27, 1981
I certify the following
report to be correct.
'
Ada Bissell
Township Clerk
Tel. No.
614-915·3544
SUMMARY OF
CASH BALANCES,
RECEIPTS AND
EXPEND ITURES
Balance
Jan. 1·, 1980
Genera l Fund
4,960.23
Motor Vehtcle
License Tax
Fund
1,375.13
Gasoline Tax
Fund
1,499 .28
Road and Bridge

WANT AD INFORMATION

PHONE 992-2156

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

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

,,_."''"',.,lilt

~

1-- - - - -

~~~

.

1
:I
.,
1
I
I
II
,I

.

Clift

14. - - -- -- 15.'' --- - - - 16. _ _ _ _ __

.,

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2CIIyt
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1.11
1.11
1.11

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1.21

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1,051.12

IICitwtrt ,.,., tlttmlnl~~n~lft IJw.,.lllf'*'tt ..,..,.,.,,..,,
Aft rl.lftftlltf tnttr tMn ClftltCftlvt .."will"....,...., . . 1 11Y
rtft. I

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
lfl ,.,,_.,y, Clrd tf l l\61tll1 1M O.."'lr'f : 'cttth 1M weN, tUt
ll'lil'll"uun. C11tl l11 MYIMt .
The Daily Sentinel
't
MMIMII N...t ..... lftlll You tl ..... lrt ICCt,JW lltl'f ........ wtM
Box 729
,I
" " '· tl Clllf cNrtt ftr ... urrylltlli Ita Nvm..r lfl Cft II TM
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769
ltltrtHI.
.I
.~-----------------------·•. u·-:----&lt;

. . . --

Public .Notice

Total Receipts
5,825.00
Total Beginning
Bel once Plus
Receipts
5,284.57
Expenditures
Supplies
4,612 .62
Total Exp.
4,612.62
Bal once, De&lt;. 31 ,
I 980
671.95
Total Exp. Plus
Bal .. Dec. Jl. .
1980
5,284.57
Miscellaneous
Funds
Balance, Jan 1,
1980
·161.68
Total Exp.
·161.68

J'EVE~

1281 days tor answer will
commence on that date.
In case of your failure to
answer
or
otherwise
respond as reQuired by the
Oh1o Rules of Ci \lil
Procedure, judgment by
defaul t will be rendered
against you for the relief
demanded in the Com·
pla 1nt .
Larry E. Spencer
Meigs County
Common Pleas Court
DATE : 4·10·81

1Fuad
·436.07
Cemftery Fund
·545.07
Fede al Revenue
Sh ring Fund
·540.43
Mise Funds
·161 .68
Total
3,152.83
rotal Receipts
Gen al Fund
15,113,52
Mot Vehicle
Li ense Tax
Fu d
12,498.42
Gas ine Tax
Fu d
15,600.00
Roa and Bridge
I
: ' l r-·---------"---~----.-.,'1 Fu d
3,211.'"
Cern tery Fund
3,691.03
Fed ral Revenue
Sh ring Fund
5,825.00
Tota
55,939.82
I
Total Recelpls
, and Balances
Gen ral Fund
20,073.75
Mol r Vehicle
Li ense Tax
Wr 1te your own ad and or der by mail w ith tnis
, I
I coupon.
F nd
13,873.55
Cance l you r ad by phone w•ren you get
or
Write
Daily
Sentinel
Classified
Dept,
Gas line Tax
I resu lts M oney not refunda ble.
14,100.72
F nd
111 Court St., Pomero,, 0 ., 45769
I
Ro and Bridge
I
F nd
2,775.78
Ce tery Fund
3,145 .96
Fed ral Revenue
5,284.57
s ring Fund
Tot 1
59,092 .65
• Expenditures
Gene• al Fund
15,593.60
eRENTALS
eANNOUNCEMENTS
Motor Vehicle
1- Cud Ol Ttllnlll
41-HOUlfS for Rtnt
Llense Tax
2- ln Mtmon 1m
U- Mobilt Homes
F nd
13,549.78
J- Announcements
lor Rtnt
Ga line Tax
4- G inlwly
u - Aplrtmtnl for Rtf11
Pr tnt one word in each
Fund
12,459.69
S- Hippy Ads
45- FRooms
space below. Each in·
Road and Bridge
• - LoS! tiKI ,:ountl
• ._SPict loraff1t
Fund
2,111 .36
i tial or group of fi gures
7- Y ..rdSIIt
41- W•nttcl to Rtnt
2,527.45
cemetery Fund
counts as a wOrd . Count
1- PuDhc Sill
41-Equlpmtnf for Rtnt
Federal Revenue
name and address or
&amp; Auction
Sharing Fund
4.612.62
phone number tf used.
9-WantedtoBuy
eMERCHANDISE
Tot•l
51,454.50
·
eEMPLOYMENT
You' ll get better result s
Sl - Hou~ti'KIId Oooels
Balance
SERVICES
if you descri be fully ,
SJ- CI, TV, RIIIIO 5qutpmtnt
Dec. 31, 1910
,, _ Http Wtnltd
s:t- lntlqufl
give pr ice. The Sentinel
· G• rat Fund
4,480.15
I r eserves the r ight to
12- S•t\llted WtniM
54- MI.c. Mtorchtndlst
Mo r Vehicle
l l- lnsurlnct
U- lulldlnt Suppll"
L cense Tex
I cl assif y, edit or reject
1 ~ - lusin"s Trtlninl
St-Ptll ftr Selt
323.77
F nd
I any ad. Your ad will be
1~- SCI'IOOISiftUrUCfiOn
Ga line Tax
p
ut
i
n
the
proper
16bd10, TV
I
F nd
1,641 .03
e FARM SUPPLIES
asif ic at ion if you' ll
&amp; Cl Rt!Nir
R d and Bridge
&amp;LIVESTOCK
I cl
check the proper box
11- WinltdTo Do
These cash rates
F nd
64.42
•1 - Fir'" EQUipmtnl
I below
Ce eterv Fund
618.51 ·
incl ude discount
62-Wtnlti to lu~
eFINANCIAL
I
F eral Revenue
n - Trucln tor 5tlt
21- IUIIMU
I
S arlng Fund
671.95
U - LivtsiOdl
I
Oppertun ity
Ml . Funds
·161.68
I
64..:..Hir&amp;Ortln
I
I Wanted
22- Moner to L.Nn
o- s..- &amp; Ptr1111ttr
I I l l- ,.roltUIGnll
Tot kASH BALANJE~.l!
1 For Sa le
I
17 - - - - - - 1' '
Strvicu
)
Announcement
· RECEIPTS AND
I
e TRANSPORTATION
18.
1:
EXPENDITURES
I For Rent
I
eREALESTATE
BY FUND
19.
I
JJ- VtM &amp; • W.D.
20. _ _ _ _ _ _ 11
General Fund
Jl - Homts tor Salt I
I
14- Motereyct.s
32- Mobllt-Homts
Ba ce, Jan. 1.
·
I
n- ,Auto ,trt1
lor
Slit
1
4,960.23
21. - ---'- -- --1 I
&amp;
AccnHrltl
I
l3- Ftrms lor Stlt
Rectlph
·
77- Aurt Rt,.lr
22.
I. 34IUSintu IYII4111np
Ge era I Prol)!!rty
I
23. _ _ _ _ _ _ 1
U - Lors&amp; Acr••tt
u-Reol Estate
I 2 _ __ _ __
24. _ __ _ _ _ _
l,._Rtll Estllt Wtnltd
nd Trailer
eSERVICES
1 ross)
4,41.79
I 3 _ __ _ __ 25. _ _ _ _ __
JJ- •••non
Ta glble Personal
11 - HomtlmpronmtnfJ
I 4 _ _ _ _ __ 26 .__ _ _ _ __
rgperty Tax
12- 'tumlllntl l•c•ntlrtt
want-Ad Adverllslnt
ron)
115.95
t 5. _ _ _ _ _ _ __ 27 .' _ _ _ _ __
U-I ..Uvltll'lt
Dudtinu
te Tax
14-lltclrlul
I 6 _ _ _ _ __ 28. _ _ _ _ __
1,670.81
ross) '
&amp; Rttrlttrltttn
l JO, M . D11ly
I 7 _ _ _ _ __ 29 . _ _ _ _ __
IJ-Oeft..-tl NIUII"f
L
et
:Gov.
&amp;
Stolt
12 NOOf'l Sltwrllft
lt-M.H. l.,.lr
I 8. _ _ _ _ __
30. _ _ _ _ __
I . Tax
4,A01 .00
tor Mortdly
tJ- U~IIttrY
I 9. _ _ _ _ __ 31 _ _ _ _ __
Cl relit License
1 10. _ _ _ _ __
32 . _ _ _ _ _ __
In
33._ _ _ _ _ __
T elllacolpls
15,113.52
I 11 . _ _ __ _ _
T al BegiMing
Rates and Other lnfo~matlon
34. _ _ _ _ _ _
etencePius
I 12
---~--1
13.. · _
_ _ _ __
ecelpb
20,073.75
II Wlrfl If' U~r
35. _ _ _ _ __

: Curb Inflation.
l
Pay Cash for
I Classifieds and
!
Savel II

Public Notice

II1Ut.-

~ t~~.b!t.1";
·~

Motor·vehtcle
License Tax Fund
Balance, Jan. 1,
1980
1,375.13
Rocolpts
Motor Vehicle License
Tax
12,489.67
Other
B.75
Total Receipts
12,498.42
Total Beginning
Balance Plus
Receipts
13,873.55
Expenditures
Tota l Exp. Misc.
13,5-49.78
Grand Total Exp.Motor Vehicle
License Tax
Fund
13,5-49.78
Balance, Dec. 31,
1980
323.77
Total Exp. Plus
Bal., Dec. 31,
1980
13,873.55
Gasoline Tax
Fund
Balance, Jan. 1,
198()
·1,4'1'1.28
Receipts
Gasoline Tax
15,600.00
Total Beginning
Balance Plus
Receipts
14,100.72
Expenditures
Total Exp. Misc.
1,228.86
Grand Total Exp.Gasoline Tax
- l'und
12,459.69
Balance, Dec. 31,
1980
1,641.03
Total Exp. Plus
Bal., Dec. 31,
1980
14,100.72
Road and Brldte
. Fund
Balonce, Jan. 1,
1980
·436.07
Receipts
General Property
Tax-Real Estate
and Trailer
(Gross)
3,]53.60
Tangible Personal
Property Tax
(Gross)
S8.25
Total Receipts . 3,211.'"
Total Btvlnning
Balance Plus
.
Recel!',!s
2,775.78
Total Ex~~ndllurta
' Misc.
2,711.36
GranCITotal Exp. .
Road and Brldga
Fund
2,711 .36
Balance, Dec. 31,
1980
64.42
Total E~p: Plus
Bal., Dec. 31,
1980
21775.71
Ctmttiii'Y Funa
Balonce, Jan. 1,
1980
·545.07
Receipts
General PI'OIItl'IY
Tax-ROll Estate
and Trailer
(GrOll)
3.567·.13
Ta.t1;!,';'f:"•'
!G:;rr.&gt;
13,20
rOI:I R'icO:pts
TOial ··-lnnlng
"••

B~Pius

'

,~-gg
·

3•loiS.H

R-rii

-~... ·~tu"';m:~

;fx~31

2,sD.ft

,~- '

611.51

aa.oo Tll,l!\.~1'/:l!'r.
1,JIIf,27
l'tlii

.•,..

3,1o&amp;S.H

"..,...
· ,_.-;,:.-.,
"tP.:•••r.::•·S«l.4
• -11 ..IIID
..,_,

. .. ... 20.Gn71
.
' . -or.-.........
(

3

.

'

5,115.00

PUBLIC NOTICE
Sealed bids will be
received in the office of the
VIllage of Pomeroy Clerk.!
Pomeroy, Oh io, until 1•
o'clock noon, May 4, 1981 on
any of In ~ following
propQSals:
1. For the · purchase by
the Village of Pomeroy of a
new 1981 four door, live
passenger, mid·slzed sedan
with the 1ollowlng added
equipment .
Small block V·8 engine
(not greater than 310 cu.
·ln.!
Power steering and
power brakes
5 black tires
loam rubber front seat
spotlight on le11slde
heavy duty oil filler
heavy duty battery 80
amp capacity
a1r conditioner and
heavv duty alternator
)lOSIIIve traction rear
axle
automatic transmission
electric door locks
vinyl upholstery
roof dnr, moldings
callbra ed speedometer
policy ·body/ suspension
package ·
transfer pollee radio,
siren flashing lights, fire
extinguisher and protec·
tlve screen from present
car to new car
90 day delivery from dale
of acceptance.
wheel base not to exceed
1161nches
2. For sele by VIllage of
Pomeroy, Its 1979 Impala
four door seden, 8 cylinder,
without radio equipment,
fire extinguisher, siren,
flashing lights or protec·
live screen. The bidder
mar state either . whal he
wll give for the 1979 lm·
pal a· or what he will allow
as a trade-In for the new
pollee cruiser . described
above.
Each bidder may bid for
either the purchaSe of the
1979 Impala or 1or the sale
to the VIllage o1 Pomeroy
Of a new pollee cruiser
deSC:rlbed abpve or both.
Each bid must contain the
full name of every person
or company Interested In
the same, and the bid must
be accompanied by a check
or bond In the sum of
1100.00 to the satisfaction Of
the VIllage Council as a
guarantee that If the bid Is
accepted contract will be
entered Into and lis per·
forma nee
proper!
SO!;Ured.
·
These chei::ks or bonds
will be returned at once to
all except the IUCCISSIUI

v

bl~r.

His check or bond will
held unlll the contract or
bid Is propei'ly executed by
him.
The right Is r ...rved to
relect any and all blcll.
·
Jane Welton,
Clerk
VIllage of Pomeroy
!4&gt; 15, 21, 2tc

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
'
Sealed proposals will be
received by the Village o1
Middleport, Meljjs County,
Oh io, In the office o1 the · ' ·
·"
Mayor Village Hall[ Mid·
1 Ohio, unll 2.30
dlepor,
P.M., May 13, 1981. and
then publicly opened and
read for the conslructlon of
WATER DISTRIBUTlO·
N
SYSTEM
IM ·
PROVEMENTS
CONTRACT NO.5
The proposed work under
th lsContractconslstsofthe
·•
construction · o1
ap ·
,•
proximately 1850 lineal feet
Of 8" water line in place;
hydrants; valvesi system
connections; and all ap·
purtenances.
r
The estimated con · · ·
structlon cost for this
pro ject Is 178,500.00. ·
Copies 01 Drawings,
SpecHicotlons and Con·
tract documents may be
obtained or examined ot
the office o1 Floyd Br6wne ,
Associates, Limited, Con·
suiting Engineers · Plan·
ners, 181 South Main · "
Street, Marion# Ohio ol3302 .
A twenty· lve dollar
1$25.00) deposit will be · •
required for each set Of
Drawings! Specifications
and Con rae! documenls
taken lrom the above o1·
1icesh the full amount of
will be refunded
whic
upon return of same within
thirty 1301 aays alter ihe
bid opening. The successful
bidder may retain his
Drawings for luther use,
and his deposit refunded .
Checks shall be made
payable to the VIllage Of
Middleport, Ohio.
Each bidder must Insure
that all employees and ap·
pllcants for employment
are not discriminated ,.. ~
against because Of race, · :
color, religion, sex, or "J~'
national origin.
·
• ••.
Attention of the B ldder Is • ...
directed to the special con·
strucllon regulations In· •:
eluded herein relative to
special requirements 1or
procurement of labor, the
special Information given .
In the Information to Bid'· •.
ders, to the Special
Requirements 1or wage
rates, the hours o1 em·
ployment as ascertained
and detennlned by the ·
Department Of Industrial
Relations and provided for
in the laws of the State of
Ohio.
The Owner reserves the
right to reject any or all
bids ·and to waive any in·
formalities In bidding., ·
THE VILLAGE OF MID·
DLEPORT,OHIO
Fred Hoffman
Mayor
(4) 14, 21, 28, 15) 5, 4tc

- " " .. ........... . .
~''"''''''"

.,

2, --~•~n~M~t~m~or!!.!!
..!.!m!!.._
IN ~ovlng memory Of Mrs.
EHie Manuel who left us
Aprll14, lHI.
The forward look Is whai
..., ask,
For-ttlng w•. at's be"lnd
~
"
"
us,
And . loyful rest In eve,.Y
task, .
As we press on belevlng. ,
Sadly missed by her
family.

3

Announcemenh

I PAY highest prices
poq1ble for gold and IIIYI!r
colna, rings, lewetry, etc.
Contact E~ Burkett Barber
Shop, Mldjjleport.

S &amp; S Ceramics now open.
Located at Jack Rood
res idence, Tuppers Plains,
Ohio. Tues. &amp; Thurs. hours
10 a.m.·2 p.m ., 7 p.m.· lO
p.m.
STOBARTS Greenhouse is
now opened. I I is located on
Racine Rt. 2, C.R. 100.
Hanging ba ~kets &amp; bedding
plants Vegetables &amp; plants
of all kinds.
Giweaway

4

SPAYED 1emale dog, 45
y ears of age , part
dachshund .
Short
to
med 1um haired . would
make a. ntce pet . 667 J267 .

4 family yard sale, AprillO
&amp; 11 . 9·4 40. Rustoc Hill,
Syracuse Clothes, kitchen
rtems, baby items, outdoor
furniture,
dishwasher,
cabinets, mise Rain can·
eels
YARD SALE. Apnl 15·16.
Charles McLain residence,
3 miles east of Racine on
st . Rt. 124. Boat motor,
bed , coffee table, craft
items, Harlequin Romance
oooks, 1969·1970 records
(451, clothes, Items to
numerous to mention .
Time9·5.

New, used, and antique furniture. No 1tem to large or
to small. Wtll buy one ptece
or complete households .
Marlin' s General . Store at
992 6370.

Now buying • gold and
stlver. old pocket watches,
chains, ' diamonds, silver
J 1amlly garage sale . money and cotns. Ma'r tln's
Thurs. 16, Fri. 17. 9·4. 488 S. General Store, Middleport:
Fourth St ., Middleport, Oh. 992·6370.

ROOFING

RNI Estate

G~t~eral

h 'ousin!,'
Hvadqu;1rtvrs

t~~~L~.~:.t J3

wa hress wanted. Apply in
person
Steamboat
Restaurant, Racine. Bet·
ween 3·30·7.00 p.m .

1~2_ _;5~it~u:!!.at!!lo'!!n!!s'-'W"-a"'n"'t"ed'-­
Seeking tm ·
ployment, Hospital, Or . o1·
lice of Clinic as recap·
tlonlsl or Medical records.
Any shirt or days. Know
medical
terminology.
References. 742 ·2030.
RfiPAIR or remodeling
work, floors, doors, wall
paneling, ceiling, or floor
tile, siding . 992·2759 .

lWIIIIY, IPil 14, 1•1

Look Leaner

w A;N TED housekeeper to
help with elderly. woman
crippled by arthritis .
Room . board &amp; some
wages. 9'12·7226.

use.

bedroom
creek

houle.
·NEW
BR'a.

heat,
ctift

·"ii'Tii.rii
Ll

4 rooms &amp; bath apartment
1n Pomeroy . 992·5621 .

WANTEO: Someone to
mow grass on Mulberry
Ave. After 1 p.m. call 992·

3367.
Real Estale- General

99H1tl
MIOCIATII

J_Trwlll, .......
R...,a DlllltTfHollft
OPI'ICI fftolllt

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, BOM 54
Racine, Oh .

ARD

Sleeping rooms; by the
week .
Kitchen,
and
television lounge. Carryout
store and restaurant within
500 feet . 992·6370 . . ·

5983.

21

Opportunity
LOG HOMES, factory
dlrect,
dealership
avai loble,
Investment
required, unlimited income
potential. Call Mr. Stacey,
1·800·438·9528. -

ltei!P Ttt" Ad

tor Futon• Relerenu

MILlER ELICTRIC
SERVICE

C&amp;AAUTO REPAIR ROGER HYSEll'S
GARAGE
PH. 949·2777

APPLIANCE SERVICE
Call Ken Young

TRAILER spaces 1or rent.
Southern Val ley Mobil e
Home Park, Cheshire , Oh.
992 ·3954 .

:JlO~ttlSt ,

For Fu1 Serv•ce

ALL MAKES

• Onposal ~
DISI'IWUI'Iers
I Hot Wattr Tanks
R e pa i r•n~ S•nce 19!3

• W;nl'lers

• Ory t rl
e R~ng n

Mobile home lot for rent .
j.Jtiqties paid' John Sheets,
afld 1·2 miles south of

I

" Spec.al Rale' For"

.- comlaundnn
.- Renlai Proper t• e~
.. Ap1 House Owner'IO

R1cln1 , Otl .

*Complete Auto and
Truck Repair
*Rebuilt Automatic
Transmissions
on
most American Model
Cars.
.S225.00 Parts &amp; Labor
Plus Fluid .
• 24
Hour Wrecker
Service
•TripleAAitihated,

985-3561

Campsites for rent on
scenic riverbank. Utilities
paid. Small trailers only
Phone 773·5651.

idMieport on Rt 7.

3-24 1 mo.

Let George Mtller check
your present elec1ncal
system .
Restdent,at
&amp; Commercial

PARH AND SERV IC E

.~---,B"'u_s.,..
ln-.15--­

New Homes - extensive remodeling
t E lectrica I work
t Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

For all of your wiring needs.

Private sleeping rooms,
with cooking facilities, llir
conditioning and cab le tv.
773·5651.

ALTERATIONS &amp; general
sewing, experienced, work
guranteed. M . Meier . 992·

CONSTRUCTION

r~§~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Pr~~~~~~~~~

Furnished Rooms

53
31

f.:o.l

- Auto and Truck
Repair
- Transmission
Repair
Hrs .: Mon.-Frt.
9 A.M.·l : JO P.M.

992-5682
10 7 tfc

~=-=M=•="='•:H::•m=•=P="='·===--~~=====4=·6:·:1:m:o:.~=========

I
I

Antiques

ATf' ENTION :
l iM·
PRIVATE · selling, 3 PO TANT TO YOU)" Io\'111
bedroom home on S. R. 7 pa cash or certified check
near Memory Gardens. 2'h 1for antiques and collec ·
tibl s or entire estates.
acres. Terms. 992·7741 .
Nothing too large. Also,
•
: gu~'s, pocket watches and
Brick house on wooded lot. coi collections Call 614·
Three bedrooms, large kit· 767 3167 or 557 ·3411.
chen, family room, double
l ·o••••oM. deck. Mld·Sixties.
S4
Misc. Merchanlse
F MALL B Side mount
Six room farmhouse with m er. 1750. 985-4240,
bath and double garage on mi es north Chester. Victor ~
one acre and one half of Be r .
ground. Located on Rl. 7 at
Five Points. $41 ,500.00. MlYTAG wringer washer .
Also an acre and one half Of
ground located neor the
fairgrounds. ~.00. 992·
L~d Star electric hoist, 1
2571.
t , exc. cond. $275. 367·
78 1.
For sale In Mason, two
acres, three bedroom, with
garage ana utilitY room B by bed &amp;u mattress.
and two bedroom apart- E c. cond. S35 . 992·2775.
ment. John Sheets, 3 and
one hall miles south o1 Mid· 4x utility trailer. Inclosed.
dleporton lit. 7.
$1 5. 992·2775.

J..,j ,I

i

REESE ~

:1

TRENaiiNG

I

I!

Homos lor Sale

Six room house on Rosehlll .
Beautiful 1.12 acre setting .
Basement and garage. Low
fifties. 614-678·2513.

-mtnt.

Sizet Irom 4JC6 to 1bl40

Ph . 614-843·2591
6 15·1fc

stairs apartment. Adults
Furnished
2 bedroom
up·
no pets
M iddleport.
only,
992 3874
'
·
45

Utility Buildings

• Small Carpenter Jobs
Darrell Brewer
,PH , 992-2882
9'12-2606
992·7861
3·11·1 mo. pd

GOING BALD't
Can't help you

TIRES GOING BALD'

Wt ~avt F1restone 721s and we

SERVICE

1
1
I
I

water·Sewer· Eiectrrc
Gas Line·Oilches
water Line Hook -ups
septic Tanks
county Certified

I
I

I

..OilE~OY HOME &amp; AUTO I
Ph . 992·2094

2·23·1 mo. 1

"YOUNGS

CARPENTER
SERVICES"
-Addons and
remodeling
- Rooling and gutter
work
- concrete work
- Plumbing and
electrical work
(Free Estimates )

c~~~~~r~~g~.

V.C. YOUNG II

Ph.367·7S60

992-6215or9902·h7314

20 INCH
PUSH
MOWER

'

'

Shoulder 8uttcried sllimmer.
Prinltd ·PIItlrft· 4913: ¥Illmen's Silts,lit 34 (38-lnch bust
willl 40-illc:h hip); 36 (40 bust,
42 hlp~ 31 (42 bull, ~·~40

«

(44 bllll. 46 hip); 4Z (46
48 lip~~ (4811or11, 50 hlpt, 4li
!SO' borlt. 52 hlp); .. (52 MI.

..............
.........
......
541tip~

IUI .. IIIIl ...... _...

.......

11

Tile !)ally Stntlntl

J : .·LANDMARK
-

·f. ~iioi St.
56

992·2111
l'omeroy

Ptls for Sale

1 walker male, 5 years old
(nile champion,; 1 walker
female, A years old ; 1
walker malo pup. All are
UKC registered. 949·2657.
Mon.·Sot. after 5 p.m.

61

Farm Equipmlllt

Kuker 400 Oal. spray ; Int.
540, 4x16" plOWS ; M .F. 13.5'

Disc .; tert. auQir: 1 set
1118P on 15.5x31 dual tires;
N.H. 367 Manure Spreder;
Dunham 14' Horogator;
Int. tractor, 916. 304-675·
224$.

three

Used R·AO Ollcllo.WIIch
Trencher. 1·61H94:'11d.

IO'x41' trailer with 2 ldded
rooms lfxG' on 101 In
Syrecutt. S11,GDD. 992·51165

Pour 15.•· 'lllllon tanks
loc.twd abovt ground II
~tltenl, 01110, $3,000.00
-h. P11DM 1·304·422-2711,

Mollllt home,
bedroom . tr.l·7479

or9t2·• ·
II

3·23·1 mo

man"' ... lllr•

1111. an.aao. tf2·2lft.

" Beautiful , Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free Stding
estimates, 949· 2801 or
949·2860.
No Sunday Calls
3 11-lfc

E conomitiiiV Prl ttil

Hay &amp; Grain

TERMITE and

Hay for Sale. .75 a ba le. 843·
2933 or 843·4831.

PEST CONTROL
Roaches ,
B i rds ,
Rodents. Spiders. Fleas,
Ants and other small in·
sect control
0
FREE ESTIMATES
1 or year termite
guarantee
Located in Gallipolis
Ph. 614-446-2101
3-27·1 mo.

Autos lor Sale

s

1971 Chrysler, all electric
with new t i re~ . Runs
good .. $350.00. 742-2139.

Trucks lor S•le

1971 INTERNATIONAL
cab over engine !W!rles 1600,
good tires. Phone 247·2642
John N . Hill.
Boatund
Motors for Sale

17 ft. Glastron fiberglass
cruiser wilh 100 h.p. out·
board Mercury motor .
Fiberglass top with full
can~as ; all 111e preservers.
ski equipment a. tandem
axle trailer. $1,495. 367,
7811 .

11

Homt
IIIII"!VImtnts

Por1.wbl e Steel
B•rn•
Storne l lll td lnt s
Equipmen1 (4' x6', l 'd ', l 'x tO',
Slttds
IO' x iO' , 10' Kl1' &amp; up)

Ga rl(lel

buill to your
Mtdtls In
Mtl f s, G1ll l1 &amp; Muon Coun·

An y

lilt

·

speclfiCIIIan s.
tlu.

FREE ESTIMATES- ALl

BUILDINGS GUARANTE ED

PHONI 367-7671
or 367-7560

L--------t========

1969 Pontiac Fireblrd
OHC6, good tires, good
body, can be seen at 628
Main St. next to Cement
Block . S600.
72

REESE BUILDINGS

. 121tt

81

Home
1mprovements

Gene' s Carpet Cleaning,
deep stream extraction.
Free
estimated,
reasonabl e rates , scot·
chquard. 992-6309 or 742·
2211 .

14

Electrical
&amp; Refrigenllon

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs , service , all
makesl 992 ·2284 . The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Aulhorlzed Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR Sw01pers,
toasters, Iron•. all small
WATER
WELLS . appliances. Lawn mower.
Domestic and commercial , Next to State Highway•
pump seles and service. Garage on Route 7, 985Tom
Lewis Drilling . 3825.
Seasonal discount on pum·
ps. 1·304-195·3802 or 1·304· Available to handle all your
895·3641.
electrical """"s. Repairs,
wiring, re -wiring, In·
13
E XCIYIII,_,
III
,.___ stallatlon, modifications,
revisions,
residential,
COMPLETE sever 1n· . farm, business. No jOb to
stallatlon &amp; backhoe ser· large or to small. Available
vice for Racine-Syracuse Immediately. Bill Cadle at
sewer dlslrlct. Dozer work 992·1182.
If needed. 949·2293 .
82

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

Dllcher work. Gas-Waler·
Electric Installed. 742·2119
before9 :00p.m.

L!!!AAP"

I.,..

BISSEU
SIDING CO.

Qull lty Bu ltt

64

75

9M2.

Hours:
Mon. · Tues. 9-6
Weds.· Fri. 9·7
Sat . 9-5
Closed Thurs .
3·29·3

1981 Chevette. 2 door, 4
speed, red, 5,000 miles. 30·
34 mpg. $4,600. 992 ·5704.

412A.
1910 68x14, 4 btclroom
11,.500. Off; 1975 HOIIypark
101&lt;14, 2 bedroom; 1970 Kit
2AX60, l bedroom; 1m
Elcona, 101&lt;14, 3 btclroom;
1979 Bristol 70x14, 2
btclroom; 1917 51111 WOOd
Park, 101&lt;14, 3 bedroom.
KaiiiUIII Mobile Homt
Slln. Kanauge, Ohio. 446·

AlHENS SPORT
CYa.ES
Stimson A••· Athens,

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph . 992·2772

71

MOIIIIe HOIIIIS
lor Salt

1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65,
three bedjooms, , _ car·
pet. 1971 Cameron, 14 x 6-1,
two bedrooms, now carpet.
1972 Champion, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms. new carpet. 1976
Cameron, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, all electric. 1971
Skyline, 12sx 6), two
bedrooms. bath &amp; 11&gt;, new
carpet . 1970 PMC,
12 x 60, two bedrooms, new
carpet. B X S Soles. Inc.,
2nd X Viand Street, Point
Pleasant, wv Pnone 675-

elnsulation
e Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows

ssr

100 acre farm, Chester
Township on Rt. 248. Small
house &amp; born. 667-6129 or
9115-4146.
32

SIDING

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

AT POMEROY
lANDMARK

Two or three bedroom
home on acre In Pomeroy .
L1rge deck, gardener's
dream, 21,000. Also, 2 and
one INIII acres lhat would
be a beautiful building slle,
secluded yet In town .
$7,500. Call 992-6279 or 992·
5320.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

J&amp;L BUMN
INSUlATION

i.J&lt;575.

Phone
l-.1.614 l-992-3325

nrar shopping. ~111er111!
1 ACRES "- ·:
with gas well

Sizes
"From 30x30' b..
SMALL

311=~-~-~-~-=-~-~-~-~-=-~-~-~-~-~~======1~· ~7-~tf~c~~==P=o:m:e:r:O:Y·==· ==

HelpWanled

NEW LISTING - Level
lot and located on a good
str"t In Syracuse. Nice
living room, equipped
kitchen, 3' bedrooms,
and a large garage with
work areo . w ,ooo.oo.
NEW LISTING In
Mlddleporl. This 2 story
frame had a lot of work
done and Is reol cute. II
hos 6 rooms, 3 bed·
rooms, woodburnlng
fireplace and a small
storage bldg.l18,500.00.
AN ACRE IN TOWN AnCI a 12X65 Holly Park
MObile H9me with con·
tral air ccind., some fur·
nllure . Woodburner,
and is In excellent condl·
liOn. 116,500.00.
CLOSE TO trOWN - A
small 3 room home with
a larae 32x30 garage
and 1'12 acret. Home
does~ to be finiShed.
$19,000.00.
ONE FLOOR - Plus a
full baMil')tnl makes
this 9 1'00111· 2 bath homa
nice. It has4 bedrooms.
kitchen, dining, living,
family and T.V. room.
Also lhtre 11 1 gariQI
and -klhop In lht
w.ooo.oo •
WE HAVI OVIR 10
PROPIITIU
TO
CHOOII FtiOM. ITOF
• ., AND LIT Ul SHOW
tHIMTOYOU.
RIALTOll
Henryi.Ciei-.Jr.

ROUSH

---------------llr-----------~

1n need of work. E•·
perienced
skidder
operator , bulldo~er
operator and truck driver.
Call992·5776 or·992·3288.

_ 16 E. ·Second Street

NEW LISTING
Modern 3 or 4 bedroom
home, bath, natural gas
F.A. furnace . Natural
wood cabrnets In kit·
ch~n. full basement,
sliding gloss door to
front porch and nice lot.
Only$37,500.
REAL BUY - 2 or 3
bedroom frame home
with bath, large kitchen,
lots Of varnished wood
cabinets. Natural gas
F .A. furnace, porch,
garage ana level lot for
only S18,500,
NEW LISTING
Beautiful river front
locotlon. 4 nice slze
bedrooms, 2 full baths,
modern birch kitchen,
lllnlng, 2 patios, and
glassed-In porch. Large
lnoples 1or summer
comfort In Chuhlre.
NEW LISTING - 4 or 5
bedroom family brick
home. l'h baths, new
gas F .A. furnace an~
central 111r. All large
rooms except one. 5 gas
fireplaces,, flowers,
shrub~rv apd garage '

Farm Buildings

"Specializing In
Re-Roofing"

· rioted Pattern

31amlly yard sale on C.R.
31 near Bald Knob
Cemelery . Clothes, lur·
niture&amp; misc. Wed ., Thurs
&amp; Fri. 843·2933.
·
11

own
RACINE GUN SHOOT,
Recine Gun Club, every
Friday night starting at
7:30 p.m . Factory choke
gunaonly.

IRON AND BRASS BEDS ·
Old furnoture, desks, gold
rings , jewelry , silver
dollars, sterling, etc Wood
ice boxes, jars, antiques,
etc complete households.
Wr ite : M .D Miller, Rl. 4,
Pomeroy, OH 45769 Or
cal l'l'/2 7760

Osborn Rd.
Reedsville, Oh.
3·16·1 mo .

4-9·1 mo. pd.

ALL STEEL

plus
a Sen·
co•·ri&lt;or . Phone
WANTED TO BUY :
away and get on Have room and board and
GOLD ,
SILVER,
igibility list at 992· laundry fro elderly in my
PLATINUM, STERLING· the
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR· 21 'or 992·2157.
home. $250.00 per month.
Y, MISC. ITEMS . · AB·
992·6022.
SOLUTE
MARKET $18 .00 to $500 weekly doing
PRICE GUARANTED. ED mailing work. No ex· 13
Insurance
BURKETT
BARBER per ence required. AP·
IN ·
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT, PL : Circle Sales, P 0 . AUTOMOBILE
OHI0992·3476.
Bo 224·0, Richmond Hill, SURANCE been canyou r
celled? . Lost
NY 1418.
operator's
license?
Phone
OLD COINS, pocket wat·
ches, class rings, wedding WA TED . People lo sell 992·2143 .
bands, diamonds. Gold or Avon. Work your own
Wanted to Do
Sl l• e~ll J. A. Wamsley, hours. Part·llme or full 11
Trea r Chest Coin Shop, tim. lf interested call 742·
Furnace repairs. electrical
Athen
H 594-4221.
235-4 or 742·2755.
work, plumbing, mobile
hOme or residence. 992·
Wanted to Buy: class rings, If you have sold insurance, 5858.
weddtng bands, anything sweepers, 1u11er brush, etc.
stamped. lOK, 14K, or 18K wei: an guarantee $1000 per
gold. Silver coins. pocke~ month if you QUall1y. Call
watches. Call Joe Clark at 992 ·7440 between 2 p.m . and
992·2054 at Clark's Jewelry·
Store, Pomeroy, Ohlo45769 6P·fn ·

Yard Sale

7

ANN'S CAKE
DECORATING
SUPPLIES

.,

Wanted to Buy

CHIP WOOD . Poles max.
diameter 14" on largest
end . $12.50 per ton. Bundled
slab . $10 .50 per ton.
Delivered to Ohio Pallet
Co., Rock Spr ings Rd.,
Pomeroy 992 ·2689.

Effective 4-6-81
MON. thru SAT.
9 to 5
Closed Thursday

DECORATING
SUPPUES

. Aparlment
lor Rent

I

. '"..
.

20%-30% OFF
ALL CAKE

NEW STORE HR

Free Estimate s
~easonable Prtces
Call Howard
949·2862
949·2160
2 4·tf c

.

SALE

SHOES

322 N. 2nd Ave :
Middleport, Ohio

All types of root work,
new or repalf gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cleamng and parnting .
All work guaranteed .

Two trailers for rent, fur nished, air condlttonlng,
cabletv . 773·5651.

44

~ll.EY'S

H. L WRITISR
ROOFING

MOBILE HOME for rent .
Completely
furnished .
Adults prelerre~ . Deposit
992·2m.

KAISER ALUMINUM &amp;
CHEMICAL CORPORATION

' ··~ ·

360 Second Ave.
446-0699

P

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

2 bedroom Mobile Home.
Adults only . Brown ' s
Trailer Court, Minersville .
992·3324.

'

9

TFM'el Agency

-

42

An Equal Opportunity Employer- Mif

@) G~LLIPOLIS

Public Notice

Business·Services

Houses lor Rent

2 bedroom house In country
tor older man or woman.
949-2801. No sunday cans.

Effective May 1, 1981, Kaiser Aluminum &amp;
Chemical Corporation, Ravenswood Works, will
stop aQ:eptlnt employment applications lor produc_tlon 1na cterecal· work either rn person or Dy
ma11. Accep1ance of applications wrll resume in the
future •s the need to fill wacancies arises. Proper
advan~e notlc;:es of this resumpt1on w111 be made.
• Thts action,. necessary due to the abundance ol
applications now on file which cannot be acted upon,
and the completion of the Interviewing for production v.acancies for 1981.
··
Applications, for · special trade and craft
(welkers, electricians, mechanics, etc.) and
management positions will continue to be received
at the office on Monday of each week and by ma11 on
any day.
"

CALL FOR DETAILS

P ub he Notace

41

NOTICE

SPACE LIMITEDI

....:

by larry Wright

CARLVlE "'

DOZER war~ . Small lobi a
specially . 742·2753.

IS

,
•
'

;

,

G-ral Hlullnt

well's TrUll Hauling. 15.00
per month. pllvt and
Orange Townships end
surrounding .,..as. 915- ·
3511.
.

'

�----

----- - ---------'---~-~--------;--------:----,---:

Sentinel

Meigs County happenings. •
Workers •••
· (Continued from page I)
would amount to an expenditure of
$11,937. The second year agreement
lilcludes health and welfare benefits,
total hospitalization
and 50
crease
oo the hour. The
costcents~
of this

Hospital patient

Acbruited-Martha Searles, Middleport;lDora Heaton, Pomeroy.
.
Disch8rged-Virgie Kline, Floyd•
W~, Pauline Derenberger, and
Carol LAmbert.

The Rev. Lawrence Glulll!encamp,
Route 1, Portland, is confined to St.
Joseph Hospital In Parkersburg, W.
Va. Cards may be sent tO Room 333,
Third Floor.
·

at y ""'en tine

ElBERFELD$
'

Veterans Memorial

•

VA ......

iflc

voq9,No.m
Copyrighted 1981

••

Craft · tands~ without flaws

.----"'------------~-----.-of
Little looks ihat go over
big with the toddling set
... sailor togs, apron
dresses, neat overalls .
too! See wh&lt;.t's new for
youdavorite tots .. .in
summer-cool cotton terrv'

Would amount to'I5,317.
The county commisaloners during
the strike by the deputies maintained that the negotiations were the
responsibility of Shel'iff Proffitt, but
they did point out that the sheriff
would have to stay within the
guidelines of the appropriations for
his deJlBrtment in granting benefits.
Commissioners are expected to
atudy the tentative agreement this

..

'Middleport•••

•

egms

~pace . s
EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE,
Calif. (APf- The era of the space
shuttle haa begun. .
Tueaday's near·perfect landing after a "100 percent successful flight"
by the Columbia Is teStimony to the
potential of the boxy, stubbywinged, SJlBce-going freighter, says
Donald K. Slayton, shuttle flight test
manager and a former astronaut
himself.
It will, he said, become the

stop in our Children's Department on ~he 2nd floor
- look ·around. You'll like the select1on of dress
and play wear for toddlers, boys and ~iris.

week.

ELBERFELDS IN ~OMEROY

workhorse of an era in · ·which
Americans will not only explore but
expioit the unique properties of
space for industrial, scientific and
military gains that were impossible
withoutlow-cost round trips.
The shuttle's 6().foot cargo bay can
ferry up to 65,000 pounds of ~
strumenls and components that
could be orbited as high-flying .
laboratories or fact9ries to produce
superior metal 111loys, phar-

maceutlcalll and other products that
benefit from the weightlessness
beyondEarth'sgravity. .
The military foresees a low-cost
way to place ever-larger reconnaissance, navigation and communications sate!Utes In orbit, and
•talks of space-borne weapollB such
as sate!Ute killers and anti-missile
· laser beams.
In addition, the spacecraft has reestablished America as a space-

going nation. For nearly six years,
the high frontier was the exclusive
domain ·of Soviet cosmonauts.
Slayton, teslmana~er at the Johnson SJlBce Center in Houston, said at
post-landing news briefing here
the historic voyage encountered no
major problems and only a few
minor aggravatiops.
··
"We've developed a transportstion system that's going ... to
carrr us out through the next' 20
years," he said.
'
The Colwnbia, meanwhile, was
being readied for its next flight : a
lwl&gt;-day trip. to Florida on the back
of a Boeing 747 jumbo jet.
At Florida 's Kennedy Space Center, the Columbia will be -checked
and re-oulfitted for yet another test
flight this fall. That one, with
astronauts Joe Engle and Richard
Truly aboard, is to last four days.
"The schedule is optimistic,"
Slayton said, "but we hope to turn it
· around (and be ready to go) in the
next si)l months."
And while. the nation celebrated,
the sister shipa for the world's first
space fleet were taking shape in a
desert hanger at nearby Palmdale.
The Challenger so far is just wings
and part of &amp;.fuselage. Construction
of the Discovery and the Atlantis
should begin in a year or so, said
contractor.Rockwell International.
Each of them is to make 100 or
more round trips into space.
" We're back in the space business

a

:Tentative •••
(Continued from page 1)
$ending all four mills of a bond issue,
approved for a period of 23 years, to
ihe state. Actually about two and
one-half mills of that four mills can
be kept locally. Keeping that per·
centage locally would amount to
about one million dollars for the
district plus enough money to pay off
Interest on bonds which would be
issued by the district. With approval
apparently granted by the stale,
voters of the district would now be
required to approve the bond issue
at the June 2 election. There are rune
years remaining on the original 23
year period of the bond issue and the
bond issue question would mvolve
only that nine years, Voters must a!}'
prove the issue on June 2but a!}'
proval would not mean any mcrease
in taxes, just the continuatiOn of
collecting the four mills with about
two and one-half mills remaining in
the district for local use. Official a!}'
proval from the state is expected
momentarily. H. C. Niehoff of a Cincinnati bonding company reported
earlier that some 25 Ohio school
districts have used the same plan to
keep funds locally and that the Stale
Department of Education .approved
all of these actions.

Area Death

.j

-EASTER PARADE OF VALUESINFANTS AND CHILDREN'S
SPRING AND EASTER

DRESSES

Trustees to meet
The Board of Trustees of Columbia Township will hold a special
meeting Saturday at 7 p.m. at the
home of Gloria Hutton, clerk.

S~ LANDS- The Space Sbullle Columblli
hal ller rear wheels ou the nunray as abe touches down
at Edwards Air Force Base lu Ca!Uornla Tuesday com-

.

.

pletlng a 54 hour millston. Tbe Columbia will be the first spaceeraft lo be reused lu future ml&amp;slollli. (AP
Laserpboto).

called Getaway Specials aboard
shuttles for as little as $3,000.
John Young, who flew the Colwnbia - the biggest craft ever orbited
and the first with wings - said afterward, "You can't believe what
kind of flying machine this is. It is
really something special. "

HAPPY RETURN - Columbia Aslrouauls Robert L. Crippen and
John W. Young, rigbl, wearing dark blue flight sulls pose wltb their
mates In Houston Tuesday evening alter their return from Edwards Air
Force Base. VlrgiDla Crippen, left, wean a Ught brown jumper. Susy
Young wean a llghtbelge dress. Stand In foreground is llgbtblue. Yellow
verticals tripe I'Will up edge of flag In background. (AP Colorpboto).

ter111 1nd chlldren'l ntw tprlng and
Ealltr dr..utwlll mtb1ny little ght
look 10 ootcllll SIZE 4 TO 11)1 &amp; 7 TO

14

MISSES
AND LADIES
SPRING AND EASTER

Come In tnd seltct a new COlt lor tile
topper for sport or tun. We have a

good ranga or slzee , Spring ahadee
and styles to choose from. Shop now
and

aa~e .

Spring fashion

~atuea .

PRICED FROM

-EASii'ER PARADE OF VALUESJUNIORS-MISSES
AND EXTRA SIZES

FASHION
TO
top~
It It's

you want, lte tops you'll gel. , al

Slltller'alf Styles, colora, labrtca...all the
latest In Sll!tltf'l ntw tprlnO collection tor
mines, ]1.1nlora and thelaroer woman.

PRICED FROM

-EASTER PARADE OF VAL.UI:~
YOUR CHOICE OF MISSES
NEW SPRING FASHION

KNIT SLACKS
You will be Oellghlld wltl'l the wkNI VIII• •
ty of 1tyln anc1 flbrtcl from Sllfller'a
•prlng and summer allc:k NMctlon. so

anwt and budglt priced.

Sllllltr'e new urlna lut'llon
blou... will .dd to any wardrobe.
Fllbflet, atyJet, cc»on ...all new al
Stlffltr't. Shoo now and 111\11.

PRICED FROM

99

BUDGET
PRICED

·s~~UP

AND UP
- EASTER PARADE OF VALUESJUNIORS-MISSES.WOMEN'S
ASSORTED STYLES-DENIM

ASHION JEANS
JuniOI''t, MIIIH ~rid Women' s size• In

denim falhlon ]Mna, Some lamou1
rnanda. Larg. ulectlon . of atyitl to

cnooH from. ShOt&gt; now and M.Vt.

LADIES AND TEENS '
' ASSORTED LOVABLE

DRESSES

-EASTER PARADE OF VALUES- ·
LADIES FIRST QUALITY
STRETCH NYLON

ANTY HOSE

~.,- BRAS
i Tlkt your choice

of
f1m0ue Lcwebt. bru.
Flbtttlll&amp;ncl Hlmff'M

cutn.
lt~tle,

JUNIORS-MISSES
AND HALF SIZES
SPRING &amp; EASTER

crou•onr

stating he would not anser the letter
or 'provide iriformation requested.
Later, Sheriff Proffitt and Deputy
Sheriff Becky Mohler along with
Prosecuting Attorney Rick Crow
met with the commissioners.
Sheriff Proffitt advised the board
that he had negotiated a tentative ·
union agreement with his employes
on Aprll 11 and requested ·tp kno,w
the board's intention concerning
ratification of the contract
Commissioner Richard Jones was
told by Sheriff Proffitt that he (Proffitt) ha~ no intention of answering
the earlier letter.
Commissioner Henry Wells asked
the sheriff if he had added any new
employes to his force since last
Saturday and was advised that one
new deputy has been added and will

e~lrom.

etc.

HANDKERCHIEFS

the "EIIttr Parade!" Juniors, milstl
and hal1 slzas. Buy fashion at budget
I
II SUlller'a.

The Melp County Commissioners · fbll~:
•
.aud-lbe -Mellll CGanty ~ Com(I J The number of P!!rsons you
1111111011 were i!%pecled to move into !f~ntly employ in each category
executive llell8ion to review the coun- ~ In the contract.
ty's ftnanclal picture, apparently
(2J! The present pay per hour of
working towardlsome solution to a t11ch p.:;rson.
strike by deputy lherlffs.
(3) The total number of persons
The deputies Wl'llpped up llOille 10 )j«lu contempblte employing by
days of strike activity last Friday ~·of this contract
when they reached a tentative
( 4) The hourly rale of pay of each
agreement with Sheriff James Prof- P,erson as contemplated under the
fitt on wages and other benefits. · cpntract.
,
They agreed to retum to their jobs
(5) Also, kindly advise whether
for five days to give the Cllllllty com- tpe salaries and fringe benefits
mlasiooers time to study the ten- tjroposed for the year 1!1111 are within
tative agreement.
1\Je appropriation made for the year
Tuesday morning the com- 11181 to your -office by the Meigs
mlasiooers sent Sheriff Proffitt a let· dounty Cornrnlssioners.
ter requesting Wormation conAccording to commissioners,
cerning the proposed contract The Sheriff James Proffitt appeared
commissioners requested the li,efore the board Tuesday afternoon

Lldlta tlrtt QIJIIIty, atrttch
nylon pt~nlyllc.t. One alza
1111 Ill, AUOfttd lhldH to

PARADE OF VAL.Ut:l&gt;SUPER SELECTION
MEN'S NEW

-EASTER
OF VALUESGREAT SELECTION
LADIES FANCY

Oul atan&lt;llr\Q colletttonl Spring Ia
n.re and Enter Is comlno. Stllller'a
carrlet tne areas lor you to WMr in

NECK TIE
It aprlng colltcl l()n ol m_tn'a

rMC!y·UICI and

ICMJr·l,._.~

neck

Utt. Your cholcl olluhton cotort
lind

~~

pattlffil.

PRICED FROM

$
OFVALUES'MEN'S POLVESTER KNIT
COMFORT PLUS

531 .W:KSON PIKE ·RL35 WEST
Pltono 4-44 - 4~2A
tu.ROAIN lfATWEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
AU. SEATS JUST S 1.50

-·1 -·of--_, . .

·DRESS SHI

ADMISSION EVERY J(.tfSIMY 11.50

FRIDAY lhru THURSDAY I

EASTER
PARADE OF VALUES

drnl atllrta k'l white and aoUd cokn.
14l\ to 11. Shop lliHitf'' and

BUDGET PRICED

JUNIORS-MISSES
NAME BRAND
SPRING AND EASTER

-·soo
'EACH

' Famou1 Br~dll Tht gr•t look• of
$1)flng and Eaatet .,, at Sllfller'a to
Olyl M11 IM m1tch )IC\!Atl, tJI:Inl, ,

1llckt, btou1t1 and topa from our
grMt ••lecllon ol tporiiWMr In
brarnil )Ou ~now and true\.

HAGGAR
SLACKS

50

-EASTER PARADE OF VALUESBOSTON BRAND
,CASUAL AND DR!'SS

BELTS

.
1
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any action anyone could · take to
prevent the deputies from walking
out again. The sheriff answered that
there would be no such action to
prevent a walkout. The sheriff further stated his deputies will reswne
their strike Thursday lf an
agreement is not reached.
Sheriff Proffitt staled he needs
1Continued on page 16)

Council hires
pool manager

1

Syracuse Coun,cil Tuesday night
named Paige Smith, Pomeroy as
manager of London Pool .this swnmer. Miss Smith had served as
assistant manager of the New Haven
Pool last swruner.
Council, in other action related to
the pool, employed Jayne Ord . as
head lifeguard and Mary Pickens as
concession stand supervisor and
assistant to the pool manager.
Ticket rates and guidelines for
operation of the pool were also adopted.
Alengthy discussion was held with
Robert Campbell, Ontario Pipeline
Company representative, concerntng action that can be taken to
minimize problems that resillt from
lnstallatioo of sewer lines. Ontario
Pipelirt' expects to begin laying
sewer lines In Syracuse In about
three weeki!.
Attending were Mayor Eller
Pickens and Council members
Kathryn Crow, president; Troy
Zwllling, Jack Williams, Mike
Struble and Willie Guinther.

Chad Pope is reported in satlafac. tory condllioo at the Holzer Medical
Center where he was taken Tuad&amp;y
after being bitten by a dqg.
The 9011 of Mr. and Mrs. John
Pope, Railroad St., Middleport, the
pre-school age yOUilfiBier wandered
Into the back yard al the home of
Dorothy_McGuffin and wu bitten
about the scalp when he a~hed
a dog which wu tied. He was transported to Veleranl Memorial
Hoapitll by the Middleport
Emergency Squad and liter w~
tralllferred to the Gallllpolla
holpltal.
AI9:64 a.m. Tuelday, the Rutllnd
Unit 1111* Patricia Cleland from the
Slllm C.Ur E11men1ar7 School

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Commissioners
seek-strike solution
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to stay," said Columbia astronaut
Robert Crippen.
And business, along with science
and defense; is what the shuttle is all
about. Though the reception has
been lukewarm so far, NASA is of.
fering flights to industry for $3S
million each and small canisters

So lovely\ Stltllert COIIICIIon ol ln.

Samuel Baias
Samuel Balas, Reedsville, died
Sunday at Parkersburg, W. Va.
Mr. Baias was retired from the U.
S. Anny and was a veteran of World
War II.
He is survived by his wife, Neva
L,, and a sister-in-law, Marjorie J .
McCloskey.
Friends may call at the
Schoedinger East Chapel, 5360 East
Livingston Ave., Columbus from 7 to
9 p.m. on Tuesday. Services will be
held at the chapel at 1 p.m. Wednesday with the Rev. Paul Bryant officiating·. Burial will be in
Greenlawn Cemetery.

2 Sections, 16 Pages IS Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, April15, 1981

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Attorney pleads not guilty
FINDLAY, Ohio - Lawyer Roy Benson, 48, pleaded iMocent
Tuesday to charges of grand theft and forgery in connection with the
alleged disappearance of nearly $1 millibn.
Benson appeared in Municipal Court after turning himself in about
10 a.m. to Hancock County sheriff's deputies. He was being held in the
county jail in lieu of $25,000 bond on each of the two criminal counts, officials said.

29 percent would avoid service
WASIDNGTON - Twenty-nine percent of all high school seniors
would try lo avoid either military or civilian service if one or the other
.were required by law, according to a new s•lfVey for the National Center for Education Statistics.
The survey of seniors released Tuesday showed that 18 percent
would accept military service, 23 percent would chose civilian work
and 30 percent were undecided.

Reagan sends official apology
WASHINGTON - President Reagan has sent the Japanese government a personal message of regret over the sinking Ql a Japanese
freighter in a collision with an American submarine.
The captain and a crewman of the 2,~ton Nissho Maru were lost at
sea after the collision with the submarine George Washington last
week in the East China Sea. Thirteen crew members were rescued by
Japanese vessels.

Message like green light
DAMASCUS, Syria - Yasser Arafat says that when President
Reagan called tlie Palestine Liberation Organization a terrorist
group, he gave Israel a green tight to "carry on its war of annihilation
against the Palestinians In southern Lebanon."
''If in his JlBrlance a revolutionary supporter means terrorist, then I
am the No. !terrorist of the world," said the PLO chief, vowing to support anti-American revolutionary movements around the world.

Two die, 19 hurt in melee
TEL AVIV, Isr~el - A disputed goal in a soccer match between two
Arab villages in northern Israel has caused two ileatllS and Injuries to
19 other people, pollee-report.
A youth from the village of Kfar Julis was stabbed to death and a
grenade wounded eighl~~eDPle in the argwnent during the ffi11tch last
week with the team from neighboring Kfar Yasslf.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The winning number selected Tuesday night In the
· Ohio Lottery's daily game."The Number" was: 826. The lottery reported earnings of $530,709.50 from the JJ:IOIIeY wagered on the drawing.
Lottery officlala said sales were $995,164.50. Holders of winning tickets
are entitled to share $464,455.

Weather
Clear tonight. Lows 35-40. MosUy sunny Thursday. Highs around 70.

Olance of ram near zero pereent tonight and :m percent Tllunday.
Wlnda Ught and mlable tonight .I

.

'

Exteoded ow.rereeut ~ Friday through Sunday:Sho...-.-and
thunderatormaFrtday and Saturday. FairSWiday. Hlghaln the mid to
upper 1101111111h to mld-'101 south Friday and Saturday and '*~' • north to '*1'70 aouth Sunday. Lowl in the 40s north to near liOaouth.

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