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

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
A a-1 lptlng ~ Euler ,.,_
Uon of ,.,., lolton briM Mtte.
Your cholol oletyiM end ookwlln
leather end . . . . ..... wtnyl.

'•17·00
PAIR

OF VALUI"-0"
BOY'S POPULAR
~RUIT OF THE LOOM

____

UNDERWEAR'
=~:.._

Oft.,..,. ..........

tOrt.

,

·3ii4.59
'

'TUIIHIIITI

3~·3.99

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

.PRICED FROM

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a111

T'HEW

be included on the ne:r:t JlByroll.
• •Pru!ecuttir t't6W isked if there is

Dog bites child

lllllrora•••alttfcwOICI

BUDGET
PRICED

ToDAY

.

'

COATS
Enter Parade or maybe a new ~rpl ng

Deputies may walk again

Commissioners
seek-strike solution
.

PRICED FROM

10thru

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

.._..lbe'*--WioV*- •
..__.,ltiiHaapttll. Att:• p.m. tile
't PIS a PlaiN ~UUICi Squid
tr'llhi ~OII¥U" atbla!IGme
GIIM. RAtlci.
.

'

LD'

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.

~

�Ohio

,Commentary

Rookies impressive

Page-2-TIIe Dally sentinel
Pomeroy.,.-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, ,lprll15,1981

'

Did you hear the one about Oregon ?._________.____,. __
wrl_lia_m_F._B_uc_kter_._Jr.·
•: ·
·:::
: ;·
•
. •.
., :.
·'· ·
:. :
:· ·
·:
:::
: •:
:~ :
•: ·
.: : :
:·:
:: :
. :.

...

.

.....

I remember once years ago in
heated debate with Michael
Harrington, the leading light of the
Socialist Party of America, reaching
a high point of emotional contention
when Mr. Harrington declaimed
that no one should be required to
pick citrus fruit in temperatures of
110 degrees. Mr. Harrington was so
emphatic on the ·pOint that I was
driven to suggesting legislation that
would make it illegal for citrus to
grow whereve the temperature
reached 110 degrees. Good King
Canute thought he had solved the
problem once and for all when he
commanded the tides not to rise
above the level of his royal toes, but
we are reminded that no one ever
learned anything permanently. Con·
sider the state of Oregon.
There is actually pending before

the legislation there a creature
called the Employment Stabilization
Act of 1981. Its grandfather, introduced in 1979, was taken to·an old
folks' home in committee, and was
allowed to die quietly , . but the
current version has got organized
labor and the usual Barry Cotnmoner types hollering about it, so
that it is probably sensil)le, even at
the cost of the national em·
barrassment involved in
acknowledging the bill's existence,
to give it a few lines of space.
If the bill became law, any company employing 50 or more workers

would need to announce its intention
to reduce its operations or to close at
least one year before the date of its
contraction.
The company would be required to

The Daily Sent.inel

l '.

..'.•..
..
'.'.

.~

'

Ill Court Strt'rt

Pumrruy. Ohi1J

&gt;' '
'

ti 1 4-~192-2J~

llF\'(lTE U TO TilE INTf.RF:ST CIF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

.'

.''

.. .
'''
' ·'
'

ROBERT L. WINGETT

'

BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assl!illnt

Publi s h~tr/Controllrr

DALE ROTHG EB, JR.
Nr"s Edi tur

A MEMBER •tf Thr A:; :;uda t~::d Prr!Hi. Inl and Duil}' Prrlili Assudation and tht•
Amt'rlt•an Nt' v. sp::~ pr r Publishrrs Assut'iatiun .
u :rrr.RS OF II PINION art' v.rl!onmt'd. Tht•\ !&lt;&gt;hou ld ht· lt·s~ tll&lt;ln JOO ~urd ~ lun;: . All
lt•t ll'n llrt' \llhjr• ·• tu t'ditinl( and rnl.l ..t ht• "il(r"wd l\ilh nanw . ;addrn~ arnl h·lt•phnnr
numha , 'luunsit:n•·d lt-U1·r~ v. ill lw puhlbh•·d. l .t·t lt· r ~ sh•tulll tk· in I:(IH!tll.a~lt' . addrr ~ .~i n..:
j~ ~ U\'1&gt;, 11111 J&gt;I'T!&lt;&gt;IItlli(J t ( t· ~ .

-Consumers still
have clout

The American consumer's apility to satisfy his desires is weakening un·
der the onslaught of inflation and high interest rates, but that doesn't
mean that he can't throw his ~ight around.
Afacet of the new personality, for example, seems to be a reluctance to
take on debt, a trait that has fprced the automotive industry into rebates
and which conceivably could3rce more permanent price cuts.
The more conservative m has shown up in housing markets as well,
as can be attested to by sellers Housing prices in general continue to rise,
but the rise has slowed and ac ual price decreases; small and temporary
though they may be, are becorlung more common in some areas.
Of all things, an occasionj.J gasoline station has been forced into
providing some of the old civil\!ies, such as wiping the windshield, even if
they are still a long way from offering free road maps and air.
America ns, it appears from fhe statistics and surveys, seem to be more
determined than they have been in a long while to live within their incomes and are demanding the j;ame from government at all levels.
They are resigned, too. The lold faith that financial matters get better
and better each year and eath generation, a trait sociologists found
distinguished Americans from Europeans, has been worn down by events.
It took a while and it took a Jot of events to do the job, but the realities
eventually provided overwhelming evidence of deterioration in, for
example, savings accounts and insurance policies.
Members of the current gereration also realized they couldn't live in
the manner of their parents, no matter what they were told, if only
because they couldn't afford to buy and run the size and type of house in
which their parents ra1sed them. Nor, possibly, afford as many kids.

Letter to the editor
created a huge federal debt. By
November of this year, the federal
The Liberals and mostly debt will exceed one trillion dollars.
Democrats are suddenly posing as · About II percent of the federal
the smartest things ever to COflle to budget is required to pay the interest
Capitol Hill . They are trying to on the federal debt. Interest rates
knock down President Reagan's have hit the moon because the
economic recovery program. 'IIhese federal government has to go on to
Liberals have been running this the open money market and bid
country for the last 5o years and against business men for these funhave had their chance. I ~ is ds. In this way the government pulls
ludicrous to watch Jim Wright, ~el· in 70 percent of the available capital.
zenbaum, Kennedy and all ot the This leaves only 30 percent for
others talking out of both sid s of business men and they have to pay
their mouth at the same time. ' hey that high rate of interest brought on
talk about fine tuning, target cuts by our own government.
and tax relief for the middle-in orne
This huge spending, mostly for
j taxpayer.
social programs and other give, : The $100 interest exclusion that aways has encouraged a deadly
: : they voted has all been wiped o~t by trend. If we don't wake up we are all
: ' inflation because they made sure it going to be..1 living in a "fool 's
.: : would not go into effect until .they paradise." The way we are going an
· : were on safe ground.
economic dictator will look like a
; : The only places govei11J1len~ can Messiah. Let's · give President
0: get money is out of your pocket rr by Reagan a chance. - Gayle Price,
' . printing it. When they takej. it~ of Portland, Ohio.
' : your pocket as taxes you have I ss to
:: live on and when they print
ey
: · they create inflation which also
&lt;takes money out of your p&lt;lfket. I just read your piece in Tuesday's
: Both taxes and inflation helps gbver· Sentinel about the problems Ontario
· nment and hurts you.
Pipeline is having putting in this
: It took the federal governmeGt 173 sewer line. Well, it isn't the maps
: years, untll1962, to reach a speriding that are not updated, it's the
: rateofiOObillionsayear.
workers' over the job. They tore our
· Nine years later the federal g~ver· water out and the tum off pipe is
; nment was ,spending 200 biUi ns a sticking a foot out of the ground.
. year. Four years later, m 1975, they
You would have to be blind not to
: were spending 300 billions a ,year.
see it. We were without water for six
. ;' In 1f77 spending broke 400 bn.lions • hours. Also they tore out three big
· a year.
poplar trees and let them lay in the
: For 11180 through 1984, ·President yard for a month. They took our
; Req~ has TARGET o~Ua~s of limestone and back drayed it in the
,• 179.8, 851.2, 695.3, 732.0 and 70.2 ditch.
: bllllona respectively. Note that pen·
Our yard ill a mess. The 1118n hole
: ding only decreases. it does not stay looks like a swimming pool. They
; ellllltant. However, by 1984, pen· never have filled it in. Water just
dinl will have slowed to a int standi in 11 and the yard. So I think ·
; where 1 surplus of O.S billio of the job superintendent had better
: dollltl Ia anticipated.
open his eyes and see what's going
Thla reckless use of money has on. - R. E. Waldnig.

:; He needs a chance

Price of progress

colnpensate the community in which ·
it had operated with 85 percent of the
revenues the corrununily would now
be deprived of owing to the company's closure.
The company would be required to
pay the cost of relocating its ex·
employees if they transferred to
other companies, and to continue to
pay premiums for employee benefit
plans for one year after the closure.
The company would be required to
advise the Oregon Bureau of labor
and Industries of its plans, ceding to
it among other things lif I read the
account correctly J the right to un·
dertake on its own to take over the
business.
Now it is said that the idea for such
a measure has received much of its
impetus from a study conducted by
two gentlemen, no doubt financed by
businessmen whose plants have not
closed down, called Barry Bluestone
and Bennett Harrison. Their book is
called ··capital and Corrununities :
The Causes and Consequences of
Private Disinvestment." A shorter
title for this book would have been :
.. It Hurls to Go Broke."
The book is described as "an in·
tensive study of corporate decisionmaking, between 1969 and 1978
I revealing thal i at least 15 million
jobs appe&lt;ir to have been destroyed
in the United States as a direct con·
seq uence of plant shutdowns."
That's another way of saying that if
15 million more Americans chewed
gwn , there would be more chewing
gwn factories.
There are, of course, opponenLs of
the bill, and no doubt reason will

prevail. But it ill a sign of retrograde
intelligence that a bill such aa this
one shotild even require opposition.
It should be greeted with the same
respect as a bill that guaranteed that
any company organized in the state
of Oregon would return at least 10
percent real pro,fit to its investors.
Another versiiJ!I of the bill might be
that any resident of Oregon would be
requir'\(1 to devote a given percentage of his earnings to pur·
chasing the product of Oregon companies if said company's income fell
below the preceding year's level. If
we had started with such legislation

long ag11, Oregon would be the place . The promoters would end up
to go to buy stagecoaches and hoola · beliind . bars, rather than at the
hoops.
cheering end of national conBut the snake oil is being peddled ventions.
not in the hazaars of Oregon, but in
Any ~anomie ente1'J!l'ile run 11Y.
the legislatilre. It ill interesting to decent human beings wW do what It
meditate what would be the con- cim to soften the shock of fal)ure.
sequences of the legislative coun- But failute is the inalienable right of
terpart ofa Fair.Trade Commission. · the consumer to ordain ·to the lnef·
Eighty-five percent of proposed fic'ient or Ullwanted producer. The
legislation would be tossed out as only effect the Oregon bill wW have,
fraudulent. Imagine in the private if ever it got through the legislature,
sector fotinding such as institution would be to caWie a IIWBive
aa our Social Security system apd migration of companjes · from
advertising it as an "insurance" Oregon to states that practice
program.
economic literacy.

... AfiD IF T~ Pifai~X'tll' CiW~D
reor;: 10 ~Xi T~ f!.ec')t\ .

eM~~ ...

hard-pressed Social Security 1.3 percent to 1.4 percent.
Under the proposa~ persons ·
system.
As a result of Tuesday's vote, the · retiring at 65 would receive 81 perhigher age will be included in a bill cent of the full benefits given to
being drawn up by the House sub- those retiring at 68.
Rep. Don Bailey, O.Pa., saymg
committee on Social Security. The
that
full Social Security benefitS at
proposal still ill subject to discussion
and amendment by the sub- 65 is enshrined In our cultur~. excommittee and by the full House pressed fears that the measure
might prove politically unacWays and Means Committee.
ceptable.
The subcommittee, by a IHl vote,
Peopl~ retiring'at age 62 under the
adopted the higher retir+ment age at
plan
would receive 64 percent of full
the suggestion of i3cinnan, Rep.
J .J. Pickle, J).Texas The sub- Social Security benefits cilmpared
committee stalf
ted that by with 80 percent under present law.
Rep. Andrew Jacobi Jr., J).Jnd.,'
raising the retirement age to 68 the
said
he was concerned that the plan
long'range costs of. the Social
would
"sweeten the pot" exceaslvely
Security system could be reduced by
fo_r a high-income person who chose

pass. That's the usual outcome,
the Handgun Crime Control Act of
In response to the shooting that 1981, said it would take intense
wounded Reagan and three others public pressure to overcome the
on March 30, Congress praised the organized opposition and give the
bodyguards and the aide who were ·bill a chance.
.
hit.
.
One provision would ban the kind
Even the advocates of gun control of cheap handgtin that was used in
acknowledge that the odds remain the Reagan shooting.
heavily against them, despite the
The opponents say tl)at episodes
assassination attempt. Sen. Edward such as the Reagan shooting do not
M. Kennedy, D-Mass., introducing change that. Their argwnent has

to work untll68.
The subcOmmltee, which thUB far
has spent two weeks fuhioning a
Social Security bill, has agreed on
changes t,hat would rec!uce the 1982
cost of the- system al)out $2.4 billion
below the level recorrunended by
President Carter.
Social Security Ia the ~~
biggest expense of the federal gover-'
nment, paying out an estimated U38
billion this year and more thaD U59
billion in the fl8cal year beginning
Oct. I to nearly 36 million recipients.
The payroll lana supporting
Social Security wW no longer be
enough to cover benefita beginning
in 1983 !l' 1984, actuaries have
estimated.

prevailed before, when Gerald R.
Ford was menaced twice by women
with gun:~, when the campaigning
George C. Wallace was crippled by a
gwunan, when R9bert F. Kennedy,
Martin Luther King Jr. and John F .
Kennedy were assaasinated.
There's no evidence to indicate
that the outcome of the gun-control
debate wW be different this time.
But there Ia an ample supply of
alternative proposals. Among them:

How reliable is
DOE'S data ?...___..,---_ _ _ _ _Bo_bm_as_niR_n
WASHINGTON ~ NEAl - When
Jinuny Carter was runqing for
president five years ago, he was
sure that he had found a national
scandal : The federal government
was dependent upon the oil and gas
companies for information on
energy supplies. The Federal Power
Comrnission even admitted that it
had no independent means of
gathering data or even of confirming
the data that it received from the
energy companies.
So, Carter pushed through
Congress legislation establishing the
Department of Energy . Many
senators and representatives voted
for the new department chiefly
because its Energy· Information Ad·
ministration would be capable of
gathering and verifying energysupply information.
But David Schwartz, a former consultant to the Energy Department,
says that the 'federal government
still is unable to obtain accurate
data on energy supplies and is
dependent upon the oil companies
for most of its raw data.

Schwartz was called in to evaluate
the depatment's informationgathering abilities after it had in·
correctly forecast a world-wide
shortage of crude oil at the time of
the 1979 Iranian revolution. ·
In early 1980, Schwartz turned in a
report highly critical of the accuracy of DOE's data and of the way
in which that data was obtained. He
found that much of the·inaccurate lnfonnation published by the depart·
rnent had been supplied by the in·.
dustry. The study was suppressed by
DOE officials and only recently was
made public.
·
According to Schwartz, the deparbnent reported a dramatic drop in
U. S. oil imports at the height uf the
Iranian crisis in ·early 1979. The
American Petroleum Institute had
reported oil imports of 8.8 million
barrels for January 1979 and ol a.7
rnillion barrels for the following
month. The · Energy Department,
wanting to be COillervaUve, lowered
the API figures by hl1f a miWon
barrels and reported U.t as Uie official government estimate uf olllm-

ports.
At the same time, data hom the
CUstoms Service ·and the Treasury
·Department indicated : that
petrolewn imports were much
higher - 9.1 million barrelil in
January and 9.9 million in Febniary.
Schwartz says that tbe Energy
Department knew of the Treasury's
figures, tried unsuccessfully to
reconcile them with the API's and
finally sided with·the Industry. Six
montha later it became clear that
the Treallury figures had· been accurate.
·
The difference waa critical. The
API said that U. S. oU imports had
fallen short of demand, wl)ile tbe
Treasury said that imports had ex·
ceeded demand. You may recall that
gas prices at the pump spurted UP"
ward shortly afterward.
Sch\Vartz's main reconunendation
· was ,that .the· Energy Department
.use audit te1m1 to revl,ew the ln. fonnation supplied b)' ~ oil companies. He advised that these .teams
"examine company records, ·
docwnenta, comeponc(ence and

rnemoranda in order to assure accurate and reliable data."
A DOE spokesman defended the
department's gathering of data as
well as Its failure to release the Schwartz study or to 'bnplement its
recommendationa.
The spokesman dismissed the
propDI!ed adulll as "very costly"

and "nol necessary." He added
"There l,s really no Incentive for the

oil companies to give 111 bad data,
and we have no Indication they have
ever knowingly done so."
Those views are challenged by a
fonner DOE official who obrerved
the development ol the Energy [n.
fonuatioo Adminl8traUon. (Now a
Washington lawyer, he Uked that
rus name be withheld "beca1111e I
hljve to go back and practice before
'them.")
''They have spent rnllllona uPon
Jllilltona, bought twce computers,
but bulcally the data that soes Into
those CGIIIpUten 1W1 CUillll from
the COOiplllles," ila!d the farmer olflclal.

SAN DIEGO (APi - Spring
\J'aining began in the icy cold of Cincinr\ati In January for Reds' pitcher
Bruce Berenyi. The payoff came in
swmy San Diego in April.
Berenyi, a rookie right-hander,
tossed a two-hitter to earn his first
big league shutout Tuesday night as
the Cincinnati 'Reds blanked the San
Diego Padres W.
Plagued by control problems,
Berenylo went to Cincinnati in
January to seek the help of pitching
coach Bill Fischer. The pair worked
on pitching mechanics for two mon·
ths.
"In the past, control has been my
problem,'' said the 2&amp;-year-old
Berenyi, who posted a 2-2 record
'with the Reds last season. "I knew 1
, had good enough stuff, if I could only
getitoverthe plate."
, ' Beren:Yl also suffered shoulder
' problems'due to his poor mechanics.
"I never let go ,of the ball at the
same · place twice," he said.
"Working with 'Fisch' really helped
a lot, but I had four walks tonight
and I'm still not where I want to be."

5/R
J

P05!'essing a poterit fastball and Namara's assessment of Berenyi's
slider, Berenyi was in command ability .
throughout the game. He struck out
"Barring injury, Berenyi has a
four ljatters and all9wed just one tremendous future in baseball," said
Padre to reach second base.
Howard.
Dave Concepcion doubled home
The loss was the fourth straight
two runs and scored on a single by for the Padres after they opened the
Ron Oester to stake Berenyi to a 3-0 season with two victories, but
lead in the first inning. George Howard is not contemplating any
Foster homered in the fourth, his lineup changes.
second of the season, to complete the . "I sajd the same thing in spring
scoring.
training," he said. "We have a
"When I was anxious to get the young ball club that is going to play
game over and get a shutout; I and they're going to continue to
hurried my releasv admitted play. A lot of our people are at an
Berenyi, who allowed singles by age where they have to play to learn.
Terry Kennedy and l1is Salazar in I am not going to push the panic but·
the third and sev~nth innings, ton.''
respectively. " But ' looked at
'Fisch' and he reminded me of the
San Diego starter John Curiis, 0-1,
proper delivery. "
who had worked 10 innings in the
"His $oulder problfms were due Padres' opener last week, giving up
to poor mechanics," sfld CinciMati just one run, lasted only three in·
Manager John McN~ra . "There nlngs and was tagged for all four
is no question he has e ability. He · Cincinnati runs.
has a fine arm. It's to · crM!t that
The two teams conclude their
he worked out with Bill Fischer."
three-game series with Mario Solo,
Rookie San Diego Manager Frank 0-1, pitching for the Reds againSt
Howard concurred with Me· Steve Mura, 1).0.

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The Daify ·Sentinel

II
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Reg.
Sale
By Associated Press
Annas opened the sixth with con- with two out in the first inning and
Price
Price
Carlton Fisk has changed the secutive singles off Geoff Zahn. The JiJe Charboneau singled. Harrah
colors of his Sox from Red to White, other two runs scored on grounders then lofted a short fly to right which
Rustic Birch
$13.16 $10.99
but be's still making the Milwaukee and Johnson delivered a twl}orun dropped just under diving Johnny
Rustic Oak
$13.16 $10.99
. $15.33 $12.99
Brewe111·blue. . '
single In the ninth.
Grubb's glove and rolled to the wall,
Natural Birch
The veteran catcher, who became
Norris recorded his second scoring Hargrove and Charboneau.
a free agent when the Boston Red straight complete-game victory Jorge Orta followed with a double to
• Sox were late mailing him a contract although he was in constant dlf· score Harrah and Bo Diaz singled to
and subsequentiy signed a long-term ficulty by issuing eight walks. But scoreOita.
deal with the Chicago White Sox, has Norris also struck out six and the
·hit 21 of his 164 career home runs Angels didn 't get a runner past
against the Brewers.
sec;ond until the ninth, when they
· The latest was a grand slam 'that scored on sacrifice flies by Bobby U. S. lt'am loses
highlighted a six-run fourth inning Grich and Rod Carew.
GOTEBORG, Sweden lAPi- The
and
powered the ·White Sox to a 9-3
• Tigers I, Royals 5
,,
Sweden
national hockey . team
• victory Tuesday . before a record
Lou Whitaker doubled with two out
opening-jlay crowd of S1,560 at in the ninth off Kansas City relief defeated the Unit~ States 4-2 to ad·
Chicago's Comiskey Park. Last ace Dan Quisenberry and scored the vance to the final round of the "A"
MASON, W. VA.
\
week, Fisk belted a three-run homer wiMing run on a single ~ Rick pool competition at the World Ice
to help deffl!t his former Boston Peters to spoil the Royals home Hockey Championships.
CARLToN FISK
, tearrunates in the seaSon opener.
opener. The Royals had tied the
The
sentwith
the two
United
States
thedefeat
"B" Pool
defeats
in fjilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~==~~~~~~~~~i;i;i;~~~~~
"I never try to top anything," Fisk score with three runs in the boUom mto
said. "All home runs are special, but of the eighth. AI Cowens and John two games.
In other action, Czechoslovakia
this one; had . to be extra special Wockenfuss drove in two runs apiece
SENTINEL AVAILABLE
because,II came in the home opener for Detroit and every starter hit beat West Germany &amp;-2 to earn a
before a big crowd and put the game " safely. WockenfWIS hit a solo homer place in the final round along with
AT FOLLOWING
out of reach.",
in the fourth inning and added an the Soviet Union and Canada, who
qualified
from
group
A
in
Elsewhere in the American RBI single in the Tigers' three-run
LOCATIONS
League, the unbeaten Oakland A's sixth. Cowens followed with a two- Stockholm.
, , made it six in a row by.beating the run double.
C'.allfornia Angels 1&gt;-2, the Detroit
Twbu 5, Marirren 4
Tigers edged the Kansas City Royals
Ron Jackson homered twice and
6-5, the Minnesota Twirr.s nipJifl! the Roy Smalley hit another as Min- Pecci .stuns Borg
POMEROY
Seattle Mariners 5-4 for their first nesota broke a string of 26 scoreless
MONTE
CARLO,
Monaco
(AP
I.· victory of the sea~~qn and . the inning:! in recording its first victory
, Cleveland Indians trimmed the of the season. Jackson slammed Victor Pecci of Paraguay stunned
Swisher &amp; Lohse
"' Texas Rangers 7-1. Baltimore a'nd Seattle starter GleM Abbott's first defendiirg champion Bjorn Borg of
Nelson Drug
i 1Boston were rained out, while New pitch of the fifth inning into the left· Sweden, ~. H, 7-{;, in the. first
-po·welll's Super Valu
"! York and.Toronto had the day off.
field bleachers for the Twins first rDWld of the Monte Carlo Open.
Beacon
In other 1118tches, France's VanThe beneficiary of Fisk's homer, . home run of the aeason. Jle homered
Sentinel Office
,, as well as his expertise with the again in the seventh 8fler &amp;naUey nick Noah downed Mario Martine~:
Krogers .
mask and miU, was lefty R~e~ C!Hl(leCted ln the sixth. Julio Cnrz uf Bolivia ~ 1 &amp;-2; Pascal Portes of
Crow's FamilY Restaurant
Bawngarten1 who won only twice in and Jim Anderson homered for Seat- France defeated Andrew Pattison of
Jones Boys
South Mrica 7-{;, &amp;-I ; Ricardo Cano
~ H deciBionslut season as the White
tle.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
of Argentina beat Pavel Slozil of
Inc! I•• 7, Raqen 1 ·
~ Sox scored only 25 rims while he, was
Toby Harrah's wind-blown pop fly Czechoslovakia 7~. IHJ; ·Christophe
'' on the mound.
·
MIDDLEPORT
'&gt;: . Bawngarten was e.cstatic, even · triple in the flnt inning keyed a tw()o Roge r Vasselin of France
eliminated
Chris
Lewis
of
New
I though he failed ro.finish when Gor- out, four-nrn 'rally· and Cleveland
Mark v, DuTton Drug. Lazy Days Cafe
'\ ~· Tho11118 i)!t a 11\'0'run homer in sP9iled the Rangers' home opener as Zealand 6-4, &amp;-3, and Adriano PanatVaughan's Cardinal
Rlt:k Wallll scattered 10 hits. Loser ta of Italy beat Fernando Luna Spain
'the nlnth,lphlng after bon Money hit
' .
JOn Matlllck walked Mlke Hargrove &amp;-3, &amp;-~.
.• a solo shot In the fifth.
Scotts Grocery, Cheshire
• "Getting a lead like that
n .Jreat,'! he said. "And Fisk Ia just l{jl___,______________.._..
vista, Les' Carryout, Mason Laundromat, Mason
• creat behind the plate. He gets you
·solo &amp; Amaco · New Haven; ~owler's Groc .. w. Colum
·. to,mor;e the bill around aud not get
111111 a rut. He mak• You change
Codners Texaco, Syracuse
.. ...... clllnge pi!C~ , •
eM' "'*illllej'It
hit hla (11'81111 111m off k*er
Pete Vuckovlch just after the right~ "rna• rile look lilly on a
' tlnU!ng biU.': Calcber T!!d Slmmonnald he :'called for i fa! ~
1
'111 Ji'ilk because I thought we coulll
pt him out. But he hit a good pitch,
¥d when he hit It I llnew It 1'il
OHice Hours by . Appointment Only
~.'.'

,

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SHEET

LOOK AT TliESE PRICES!
5/32" PANEL

Fisk makes .Brewers blue

"*

50/?RY J

14J45 /AT/;

'

Berenyi blank$ San Diego

Assassination attempt produces proposals
WASHINGTON 1AP) - The at·
tempted assassination of President
Reagan has produced a catalogue of
congressional proposals for new
Jaws to deal with violent crime in
America.
They range from famillar
legislation like handgun control to
newmeasures like televising punish·
ment imposed on criminals.
It's a good bet none of them will

l/8" ·Panels

"

Age change bill receives tentative approval
WASHINGTON (AP i - A
proposal to raise the regular
retirement age for Social Security
from 65 to 68, given tentative a!&gt;'
proval by a House panel, eventually
could save the beleagured system
billions of dollars every year, officials say.
The proposal, which would be
phased in over 10 years beginning in
1990, is designed to give people an incentive to work longer while protecting those who feel they must retire
at age 62.
"This is the best plan I've seen
yet," said Rep. •WiUis D. Gradison
Jr., R-Ohio, who has argued against
using general revenue funds collected through income taxes for the

CONTINUES

STRANGE PLAY- Detroit Tigers' catcher Lauce · slanzlM with Tlgen' third baseinao Mark Kelleher
.Parrish, ,ceoter, bops over KaDSas City Royals' Hal .J1cht, durlog Tuesday's game at Royals Stadium; Ai
McRae after tagglug out McRae as Royals' George l~ft slgoallog the out is umpire Lou DIMlro. (AP LaserBrett, second .from right, keeps his fool oo the bag as be p~otoi .

~ ~y ~C\Xl ttl~ M~tl
d.IT ·cf l'tle Cctl~\olie~Tt..'(
~c(ATet "J~TE&gt;~ AWi

Big
Center

By Auoclated Preas
Dodgers, who are off tQ a ~ start
'
Outside of throwing from the left thiueaaon.
·
·
side, .Fernando Valenzuela bears lit.
pecializes in Auto Parts .
Astros 8, Bnves 2
Ue physical resemblance to Sandy
American &amp; Foreign
Joe Niekro scattered seven hits and
Koufax.
But the Los Angeles Dodgers' drove in two runs with a fiftl1-lru1~ ·I
rookie is certainly pitching like him single to lead Houston over Atlanta
94~2894
for the Astros' first victory this
these days.
A chunky version of. the great season after four losses.
Dodger southpaw, Valenzuela has r:========--_L~!::::!!:..~~::!~:::::!=:!:
started out on the right ·foot this
season with strong showings in his
first two starts- including Tuesday
night's 7:1 decision over the ·
Francisco Giants.
. Valenzuela, who pitched a five-hit
shutout against Houston on openln!: 1
day, gave up but four hlts and struck
out 10 in his second start. The run he
gave up against the Giants was the
only earned run against him in 352-3
innings of major-league pitching and
70 straight innings dating back to
Class AA ball last summer.
"I'm a little surprised," said
Valenzuela about his seeming
superiority over the hitters. "But I
have a little confidence in myself,
too."
Noted Dodger catcher Steve
Yeager: "The most amazing thing is
PER ·
his composure. He stands out there
SHEET
lilie an old pro. And everything he
throws is improving, too."
'Bruce Berenyi, another rookie,
also made some news·Tuesday night
when he pitched the Cincinnati Reds
to a 4-0 victory over the San Diego
Padres with a two-hitter.
In the only other NL game, the
Houston Astros routed the Atlanta
Brave$ 8-2. Two games were rained
out - ·Olicagoat Montreal and St.
Louis at New York.
Valenzuela, a 20-year-old from
Mexico, , extended his streak of
scoreless iMings to 32 before giving
up the Giants' run with two outs in
the eighth on a double by Larry Herndon and a single by Enos Cabell.
Ron Cey drove in the Dodgers' fir·
sl run against San Francisco leftbander Vida Blue with a sacrifice fly ,
in the fourth inning. Yeager opened
the seventh with his first homer of
the year, and Cey delivered a tw()o
run double in the eighth for the
Sale
Reg .
Price Price

•

�.• .
::·

..
'

By Ass9(!1aled Press
Ernie Grunfeld is &amp;-feet-6 and .a
stocky 220 pounds, with large,
thickly muscled legs. ·He hardly fits .
the mold of National Basketball
Association guards, those cat-quick
whippets who dart and dash about
the court.
·
"Ernie looks like the first
Clydesdale pulling the Budweiser
wagon," says his coach, Cotton Fit..
zsimmons of the Kansas City Kings .
But Fitzsinunons couldn't be happier about the way this Clydesdale
has pulled the Kings into a com-'
manding position in their playoff
series against the Phoenix Suns.
The Kings. who lead the best·of·
seven Western Conference semifinal
3-1, will try to finish off the Suns
tonight in Phoenix. Also tonight, San
Antonio is at Houston and
Milwaukee at Philadelphia.
Grunfeld was drafted on the first
round in 1977 by Milwaukee as a forward but proved too small to play a
frontcourt position in the NBA. He
was traded to Kansas City in 1979
and converted into a guard, at which
position he started 27 games this

...
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WHOSE BAll?- Mike DUIIleavy I 101 of the Houston •Rockets and
James SU.s (13) of the Saa Anloolo Spurs battle for possession of the ball
ID lhls acUon from their western conference NBA playoff game at San Anloalo Tuesday olgbl. lAP Laserpbolo).

TodJJy's

Mljorl.eone-Giuc&lt;
NATIONAL LEAGt!E

WLPttGB
2 I
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22
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Al1anla
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Sin Dte10
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San Fhincllco
2 4
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HOilllon
I 4
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Cblcqo it Montrool, ppil., rain
St.Louil al New York; ppd., rain
HOIIIWD I, Atlanta 2
'
Cincinnati ~ Sin DieKO 0
IAil An&amp;el" 7, San Francis&lt;o 1
. Oolypmaoch&lt;duled

ween

....

(Zadlry ·1-4)
I'UIIINrgh IBIIIIIY 1).0)

By WW Grlmllev
AP Correspoade~l

Casey Stengel lives.
Not only that, but he's on Broadway, of all places. Well, almost on
Broadway, anyway. New York's
American Place Theater is located a
lung&lt;&gt; shot or so east of the big
street, but Casey was never one to
quibble over details.
Somewhere, the ol' perfessor must
be watching actor Paul Dooley, who
creates the role of Casey in this
demanding one-man show which
played to a baseball-packed audience tlie other night.
[)ootey is a veteran character actor and without his makeup he looks
like any &lt;&gt;ther ordinary citizen,
• lacking the craggy features that
made Stengel's face so distinctive.
But once he starts mugging, twisting
his mouth, wrinkling his forehead like magic, there's the old man, rul&gt;bery face and all.
"He was a very theatrical guy,"
said Dooley. "I never saw him on the
field, but I've watched video tapes of
him. In the back of my mind, I have
certain ideas about him. He was
bow-legged, walked kind of stooped
over, thick in the middle with baggy

tor for 26 years but this is his first
one-man show.
"It's challenging· ~nd scary as
hell," he said. "It's an actor's
dream. Do good and all the applause
belongs to you. Do badland you have
nobody to lean on. You're out there
alone. It's a fascinating project, but
I've always had some help. A lot of
actors would love to try something
like this, but it takes nerve."
Dooley's career has taken almost
as many twists and turns on stage
and in films as Stengel's did on the
field.
"I used to be a clown, a juggler
and magician dressed •as a clown,"
he said. "That physicatl, low comedy
appeals to me and it's handy playing
a guy like Casey."
He's been in a number of films and
played the role of Wimpy, the hamburger-gulping sidekick in Popeye.
"Casey looked a little like Popeye
when he winked, don't you think '"
he said, P&lt;&gt;in_ting at a pictu.re anq
mugging. " In many ways, he was a
comic-strip character, too."
Among Dooley's credits are
television's Electric Company, film
• pants."
roles in Slapshot, Death Wish, The
That's Casey, aU right, And don't Out-of-Towners and an upcoming
forget the hands stuffed in his back Burt Reynolds film called Paternity,
pockets and his wobbly walk.
and Threepenny Opera on stage.
There are limits- to what modern
"I've done a little of ~ verything,"
By The Associated Press
theater makeup can do, but Dooley he said. "So did Stengel, I guess."
Paul Runge walked with the bases
makes his tools work for him.
Now he's played Wimpy and
"These are mJ! eyes and my mouth. Casey, almost back-t&lt;&gt;-back. What loaded in the ninth inning to give the
Richmond Braves a 10-9 InThey are the instruments of ex- · more could an actor ask for'
ternational League baseball victory
: pression on the stage, but I can only
over
the Columbus Clippers.
do so much with them," he said.
The
other three games scheduled
To help him create Casey, Dooley
Tanner
upset
for Tuesday - Tidewater at
has lined his dressing room mirror
with photos of the old man, who was
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Hank Rochester, Toledo at Charleston and
every cameraman's favorite Pfister upset second-seeded Roscoe Pawtucket at Syracuse - were postponed by rain.
customer. There are a variety of
• studies - happy, gruff, clowning, Tanner Ii-I, &amp;-4 in a first-round
The walk put an end to a wild consingles match of the $75,000 Jack
pontificating. The actor sits and Kramer Tennis Open at the Los test in which the Braves had blown
an B-2 lead.. They came back with
studies the pictures every so often, Angeles Tennis Club.
trying to recreate the man.
In other matches, sixth-seeded two runs in the ninth to hand ColumThe Amazin' Casey Stengel, or, Sandy Mayer beat \mseeded Vince bus its first Joss in four games this ·
Can't · Anybody Here Speak 'This Van Pattern 1-6, &amp;-1, &amp;-3 ; fourth- season in its home opener.
Riclunond jWllped to an early 5-0
Game? is part of this theater's seeded Bill Scanlon downed Sher• American Humorists Series. "Casey wood Stewart 6-J , s-t ; No.5 seed Rolf lead after scoring a single run in the
qualifies," said Dooley. "He cer· Gehring of West Germany defeated second off Colwnbus Greg Cochran
tatnly was a hwnorist."
Trey Waltke &amp;-4, &amp;-2; Stan Smith and a grand slam home run in the
You could look it up.
scorea a 7-5, 7~ victory over India's third by Larry Whisenton.
· The Clippers came back with two
Perhaps the toughest parr of Ramesh Krishnan; John Austin beat
runs
in the bottom of the third on
Dooley's assignment was to capture Tim Wilkison &amp;-4, &amp;-2; Mark EdSte1J8elese, that unique attack on monson defeated Scoit Davis &amp;-3, 2.,, Gary Smith's twt)-run double. RichEngli.lh syntax that made Casey one Ii-I; and Nick Saviano topped Bruce mond scored three more times in the
fourth, including a home run by
of a kind. Ask him, for example, who Manson &amp;-3, 6-3.
Whisenton
inside the ball park.
hill third baseman will be this season
800 Dooley swings into action,
wrinkling his nose and winking.
"Well, ya know I got this leila, who
can play third, but if be can't, the
other' !ella might. But you know that
• !ella can't hit left-handen and that
• left-bander throws. as fast as Mungo
arid he could throw a lambchop past
a fOJ: •.·5o yoll have to look at my guy
'apin .... "
Got all that, bub?
"Everyone thought he didn't know
; whit he .,.. aY!bl· All he did
~ though, wu tUe · tha long way
around In llll'tming a question.
1
lfe'd lhinll: of ID uec:dote and throw
It in. But be alwaya kept the original
Plus Pipe FiHings &amp; Other Plumbmg Supplies
qlllltloa In ~ mind. And even' tUIIIy, be ..... eel it. It may have
: tiUn him 1 whlll, but he 8111Wered
: it. He bid 1 mlad like a computer."
•• r Dooley hu been ~ profeulonal al.'-

Richmond defeats

Columbus Clippers

!~).

(Ruthven

at Phllad&lt;lphio

(n)

Atlanta I Soul !HI) al Houston I Ryon

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Ctnd1V11U

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San

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IM,... !HI), (n)
Los Anielet !Hooton 1-ttl 111 San Frandaco lll'likaon 1).0), 1n )
'Diandly's Game.
Chicago at Montreal
St.Louis at New York
Pillaburih .ol Philadelphia, In )
Only l(llllel IICheciUied
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at Chicago
(Trout G-O or 8Ufl'lll D-4 f
Cleveland (Barker (H) ) at Tew fMedlcll !HI), ln J
New York !May 1.0 1 al Ton~t~W !Todd
1HI or stleb ~II. ln l
Detroit rPetry 0.0 1 at Kan:a City
(GW'll ~II , lnl
Oakland il.anglon! 1~1 ai Caiffomia
iJeHenon ~II . (nl
.
MinnN.Jta fE rickton O.J l ;~t' Seattle
iGieltoo 1~1. In )
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Cleveland. at Milwaukee
Detroit at Turoow, (n)
Ookland 11 Ca!Uom/a, ln l
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TIIITI hllh pmt - RJetM:l 's Used Cars 668; .
Prolllu'sef""'ry~; Riebel'• Uled Can637.
Team Rrie1 - Riebel's Uaed C.Nilllll : Prof.
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technique. "
COLUMBUS, Ohio i AP) Broadnax thinks his blocking has
Vaughn Broadnax, the biggest Ohio
improved.
It's his running that conState runner since Pete Johnson , is
TO INSPECT CONTACT ELMER BAILEY, YARD FOREMAN
cerns
him
now in spring practices
on a trial run this spring as the
that wind up with the Ohio State in·
Buckeyes' new fullback.
''They said they're counting on trasquad game May 9 in Ohio
me," the Xenia sophomore said. Stadium.
" Running low," he said. "That's
"We'll find out."
the
one problem I have."
Broadnax is the Sl!me height as
Johnson, 6-loot-1. The Ohio State and
Cincinnati Bengals fullbacks weigh ,-------------&lt;~-------------------about the same. in the 245 to 25flpound range.
Ohio State coaches hope Broadnax
can run the ball the way Johnson did
in his final college season, 186
carries for 724 yards and 19 touchdowns, as the Buckeyes went 9-2-1,
SALE ENDS 5/31/81
beating Colorado 27-10 in the Orange
Bowl. .
·
It's ·a big assignment for the
newcomer.
Broadnax rushed just II times for
35 yards, mostly in goa l line
situations. He's trying to take over
for 1980 regular Tim Spencer, being
switclied to tailback this year.
The Buckeyes' coaches want to
generate more of a power attack
with their !-formation. Spencer is &amp;-1
and 210 pounds, light for your standard Big Ten Conference fullback.
He's more of a speedster.
Broadnax said he lacked fun·
damentals for playing fullback in
Shock Absorbers
the 1-fonnation whim he went to Ohio
State.
" I came here not really ha ving
any blocking skills," sa id the
product of Xenia High School. "I
neverknew how.'Jn high school: you
could just knock somebody down
and nobody would know the difNOWONLY
fere nce. I didn 't have any

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)
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POMEROY CEMENT BLOCK COMPANY

Sports World

EEK ANNIVERSARY SALE

For the
.. .
l~ecord .•
'

-

By George Strode -·

The Daily

1911

season ·becailse &lt;i inJuries .to . willlngtobepatlentwlthme&amp;OOad- · Murphy, Combln8d for 70 .polnta.
·regulars Phil Ford and .()tis Bir- just their style. Willi P1iJ (FOrd), we Malone'• .late ef!~ be~ 10
dsong.
· .- · ' ran. With me we have become more of· ~. Rocll:ell lut II . ~ "Sure there haS been a trend · of.a -.up team, and that baa caused staved olf a Spun' l'llb' -1 cut
around the league toward big guar- the SQDa.alot of their pr.)wlms. We Houston's 14-polnt leld to Olle Pl&gt;lnt
ds," said Fitzsimmons, "but When lookthemoutoftheirrhytlun."
twicelnthelutfourmtnnt8
.
you took at guys like Magic Johnaon,
In ~. llie Badll and
Walter Davis and George Gervin,
Fitzsimmons said the Kings had 78ersmUedMgGiollnto$11Dight's
Ernie's move seems imProbable. ·nooptiOIIB.
game, and one ill thi key •tcllupe
Ernie is a plugger and thoae guys
"We:can't nin with Phoenix," he figurestobethe~*'ll[e betare finesse players, but you need the said. "We have to gear jt down. We
Milwaukee's Bllb Llnler and
pluggers, too·." .
don't have Blf11Uch talent .81 \e!1IIIS Philadelphla'a Darryl.Dilwldns.
Grunfeld has been a starter since like Phoenix, but ·we have a lot of
The veteran Lallier haa G!J~Piayed
Ford collided with Golden state's guts and we'reexecutingvery well." · Dawkins In three of the fciur •pmes
Uoyd Free in a late-season game . Al8C1 e1ecuting well ·are ti1!l so far, aver&amp;lllng 17.5 polnta, 7.0
and suffered a scratched eye which HQUSton Rockets, wbo took a 3-2lead rebouDds, 4.0 ualJia and 1.5 blocked·
led to blurred visiort When Birdsong in the other West semifinal by shots In 31.5 minutell ol action.
injured an ankle in the playoffs, · tieatlilg the Spurs 123-117 Tuesday Oawk!im, meanwhile, got In foul
small forward Scott Wedman was night at San Antonio.
trouble in three of the four games
shiftedtoguardalongsideGrunleld. : Houston's inside and outside and has averaged jolt 113 ·points
In Sunday's 102-95 Kansas City threats, Moses Malone and Calvin and 4.5 rebounds in 2t minutes .
viclory, Grwlfeld played the full 48
minutes and scored 'l:l points.
. '
"At first all I did was bring the
ball up and try to get everyone inFOR SALE
volved in the offense," he said
"That was not too difficult. Mter
awhile I started to penetrate some
and picked up a few tricks. The big
thing IS the players and coach were

Ohio
Sportlight

~

__.

Kansas City tllke.s 3--1 series edge

'

'

.. --..

~!:====~~~~~~~::~--~::~::::::::~----------_!~~~~~~~~O~h!io~----~----~--~----------------------~~~~~~~~~

..

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I)

P('f\o

·

$ 29
••••

----·

COUNTRY TIME
LEMONADE
.10 : : ' :$219
, L-imit One Per Customer
Good Only 1t Powell's
Expires April fl, 1H1

CRISCO
SHORTENING

3 LB.

CAN
Limit One Per Customer
GOOd Only at Powelrs
Offer Expires Aprll11, 1911

�.

Ohio

Blues edge

illS 1981
'

.

~ter holiday

. engu1n~

anyway. · ·
·.
· ~
chulll', beginnil)g Thursday;
,
·
"!didn't
want
to
look
up
at
the,net ·
Ectmontcm at the New Yorlt Islarlfor
fear
it
would
throw
me
off
aiY
ders; Calgary at Philadelpl!UI; the
!'lew York Rangers at St. LoUis, and stride."
Mike Zuke found Crombeen all
· Minnesoia at Buffalo.
·st Louis finillhed second in NHL alone in front of Millen when both
standings to Pittsburgh's 15th but · PittSburgh defensemen went to the
· were severely iested by the gutsy comer after the puck. His shot was
Penguins. In fact, if not for AII.Star partially deflected by Millen but net
goaltender Mike Liut, the Blues .enough to stop it from trickling in.to
would be sjtting on the sidelines give St. Louis i!$ first playoff series
win since 1972.
rightriow.
"I just wish St. Louis eould·go aU
· Liut and his 'Pittsburgh counterpart, Greg Millen, ~ere lhe way," said MiUen,.who.Uke. Lint
phenomenal Tuesday, especially in., made 48 saves. I'd like to see them
overtime. Each team had 13 shots on · win it all.''
"The people of Pittsburgh should
goal in the first OT period, with Liut
making wondrous saves on shots by be very proud of this hockey club,"
Mark Johnson, Rick Kehoe and said Penguins Coach Eddie John·
Peter Lee.- And Millen wa~ eq$11y ston. "! really felt we should qave
excellent, stopping Jack · Browrl- won it. Wegofagreateffort." ;
The Flyers also put forth a great
sehidle, Brian Sutter and Rick
effort, outshooting the Nordiques 37LaPointe.
" I just came out and happened to lli and putting the game away with
be at the right spot," said Cro!rl- three goals in the 5:07 of the third
.
been, who played only four shifts in period.
Ken Linseman started the onregulation. "For a game that had
been so physical, I guess that most slaught on a 2-orl-1 break at 18 secorlof the guys were kind of tired.' At ds, then Paul Holmgren connected
CINCINNATI - The Cincinnati least I prayed that they were. at2:38
Reds will begin a cable televisiOn ex- ,:-_:_-----~---------~----, periment in late April and provide
the first of a series of home games to
cable TV systems located Iro.plus
miles from Cincinnati, but within the
six primary sta\es known as Reds
Country.
•
Manager Frank 'Howard's San
Pomeroy, Ohio .
biego Padres will meet the Reds at
I
'
Riverfront Stadium on Tuesday,
1\pril 28 in the first game.
.
Overall operations will be handled
by Jim Winters, the Reds' Director
Ji Broadcasting. This includes
Will Be Given By
production and the development of
Mr. H. William Mattingly
the network of cable TV systems.
"No one entity is available to
. .
.
.
produce and develop the network, so
our club will go ahead with the
MEIGS INN, POMEROY, OHIO
trial " Reds President Dick Wagner
AnyoAe who haS trouble hearing is wel come to have a hearing test us·
said~ "This will be an e&lt;pensive ven·
ing modern electronic equipment to determine if h is loss is one which
lure for the Reds, one we project
may be helped. Some of. the causes of hearing loss will be explained
financial losses from for at least two
and diagrams of how the ear works will be shown .
years, but we feel the knowledge and
We Also Servic·e and Repair All Makes of Hearing Aids.
experience will be worth the in- .
Batteries and Supplies For /Ill Makes For Sale . ,
vestment."
IF YOU CANNOT COME IN The Reds started their own radio
CALL THE HOTEL FOR A HOME APPOINTMENT.
PHONE 992-3629
network in 1971 and have one of the
largest networks in all sports, serving over 100 cities in seven states.

rec~es offered

By Asaoe.ll!ted ~tress
. ·If the St. Louis Blues never see
a~other penguin, It will be too soon.
The Blues, heavy favorites to win
their best-of·five preliminary round
series with the lj&gt;Wiy Pittsburgh
Penguins, wete extended.td the•iimit
Tuesday night before slirviving to.
continue their chase of the National
· Hockey League championahip. St.
Louis' Mike Crombeen, who had
been on the bench since midway
through the game, scored at 5:16 of
the second overtime to boost the
Blues over the Penguins 4-3.
·
In Tuesday's only othet playoff action, the Philadelphia FJ~ers topped
the Quebec Nordiques 5-~ to win that
series.
Those results set up toe following
best-of-seven quarterfinal mat-

END SEASON - Members of Coach Chuck
Williarru;' fifth grade Racine Royals recently completed ibelr season, Team players were. left to rl~b~

Jon Tuttle, Shannon Riffle, Brian Deihl, Donnie Riffle
and Marty Cleland. Chris Diddle was absent.

to .brighten
menu·

for

APRIL 16, 1981
9 AM TO 12 NOON

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fonner over the past four seasons
and gunning for a fifth consecutive
Player of the Year title, used a victory in this event last year to kick off
a string of three consecutive victories.
And he'll be seeking a third corlsecutive title in this winners-only
tournament. Jack Nicklaus, back after a year's.absence, calls it golf's
"best fonnat. "
And Lee Trevino and Johnny
Miller have, for years, placed a high
priority on this tournament which
brings together only the winners of
regular PGA Tour titles from the
past 12 months.
"You've really accomplished
something when you beat all the
other champions from the past
year," Trevino said. He said he was
fully recovered from back pain that

bothered him last week in Augusta,
Ga.
Although there are nine multiple
winners from the qualifying period
- with Watson winning s1x events a relatively large field of 29 players
will be chasing a $54,000 first pme.
In addition to Watson, who holds
the British Open and the Masters .
title, and Nicklaus, the current U.S.
Open and PGI\ champion, the other
multiple winners in the field are ·
Trevino, Miller, Bruce Lietzke, Curtis Strange, Larry Nelson, Ray
Floyd and David Graham.
Ten men are making their first ap-.
pearance at the posh Southern
California resort. They are Strange,
Mark Pfeil , Scott Simpson, Scutt
Hoch, Peter Jacobsen, Don Pooley,
Phil Hancock, Mike Sullivan, John ·
Cook and Canadian Dan Halldorson.

AVONDALE

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP I - The - I, Lonnie Wheeler, Cincinnati Telegraph, and Doug Harris,
Cincinnati Enquirer among large Enquirer. 2, Gary Nuhn, Dayton Springfield Daily News.
circulation newspapers and the Daily News. 3, Bob Hunter, Col urnLake County News-Herald among bus Dispatch.
Sports C\)1 umn - I, Doug Harris,
· the smaller ones have won the best
Sports section - I, Cincinnati Springfield Daily News. 2, Doug
· sports section awards for 1980 in the Enquirer. 2, Cleveland Plain Dealer. Harris, Springfield Doily News. 3,
Ohio Associated Press Sports 3, Akron Beacon Journal.
Joe Klinec, Elyria ChronkleWriters Association competition.
Newspapers Under 100,000
Telegram.
The Enquirer was judged No. I for
Circulation
state newspapers with more than
·Sports news story - I, Jeff War·
General sports writing excellence
100,000 circulation. The News- den, Athens Messenger. 2, Paul - I, Leo Roth, Lake County News. Herald, located in Willough!JY , was Hoynes, Lake County News-Herald. Herald. 2, Jerry Rombach,' Ely ia
: tops among newspapers of less than 3, Doug Harris, Springfield Daily Chronicle-Telegram. 3, Steve Win· 100,000 circulation, said Dick Otte of News.
zenread, Portsmouth Times.
: the Columbus Dispatch, president of
Sports feature - I, Mike Van
Sports section - I, Lake County
: the OAPSW1\.
Sickle, Mansfield News Journal. 2: News-Herald. 2, Warren Tribune· For the first time in the eight-year Jim Walker, Ironton Tribune. 3 Chronicle. 3, Mansfield News Jour; history of the annual awards, one (tie 1, Bob Parasiliti, Painesville nal.
: newspaper won the maximum of ...-------;-----------------"1
: five first places. The Enquirer .had
• the top writer in all four categories
: along with the best section.
· The awards, judged by nationally
known sports writers:
Newspapers Over 10\l,OOO Clrculatloa
Sports news story - I, Randy
. : Holtz, Cincinnati Enquirer. 2, Cindy
w ...
Morris, Cincinnati Enquirer. 3, Mar.
.~. '
ty Willlams, Dayton Daily News.
Sports feature - I, Cindy Morris,
ctnclrmati Enquirer. 2, Lonnie
Wheeler, Cincinnati Enquirer. 3,
A
Bob Baptillt, Columbus Dillpatch.
Sporta eolwnn - I, Mark Purdy,
Steve~ L. Story and Karen H. Story
Cincinnati Enquirer. 2, Ritter
Collett, Dayton Joumai Herald. 3,.
236 W. 2nd, Pomeroy, Oh.
Tom Melody, Akron Beacon Jour&lt;Formerly Meigs Gen . Hospttall
nal.
Office Pfl. 9~2-6624
Home Ph. 992-3523
Gener1l 1port8 writing excellence

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Follow recipe for Herbed Oil and
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(Note: Receipes may be doubled.)

Semi· Boneless
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Charlie 'Woods, Danny Gheen, Chris Jewell, David MeMUian, Shawn Diddle and Mark Porter.

Watson still riding high

.

NO:C&lt;)OKAPPLE RELISH
mixing bOwl. Gradually beat in olive
I tablespoon Dijon-type mustard · on with f9rk or wire whisk. Stir in
or seeded mustard
remaining ingredients. Taste and
adjust seasoning.
. 3 tablespoons olive oil
~'• ~poon paprika
Refrigerate in a tightly covered
~ teaspoon salt
container if relish will not be served
I tablespoon sugar, or more to at once, but bring to room temtaste
perature before serving. It will keep
Juice of I medium (3 ounces) at least two months in the
lemon
·refrigerator, but the flavor is best
I~ teaspoons cider vinegar
when used within one month. This
3 to 4 tart apples, peeled and kitcher!-tested recipe makes about
grated.
two cups, depending on size of ap· Place mustard in a three-cup ples used.

14,17-LB . AVG. WHOLE

THURSDAY,

, ELECTRONIC
HEARING TESTS

RANCHO LA lUST A, Calir. (API
· - Tom Watson is still ridin15 a high
from his Masters triump~ as he
comes in to defend his title ,n what
many players consider golf's "Fifth
· Major," the $300,000 ·."ONYToumament of Champions.
"The letdown hasn't set iu," Watson said before a practice round
over the 7,08().yard, par 72 La Costa
Country Club course, site of the
unique event that begins Thursday.
" It was important to me to win the
: Masters," he said, "but that's
: history. Now I'm looking •head to
· the Tournament of Champions.
: "Obviously, I'm playin ~ better
: than I was at the first of the year.
: And when you've got it going, you
· want to keep it going, ride that horse
: as far as he'll take you."
: Watson, golf's outstanding per-

~'•~nsait

NEAFood
~'• teaspoon crushed dried mint
. leaves
·
MARINATED
1 pacPge (I~ OW1~1 frozen ·cut
liB'teaspoon pepper
green beans, thaw~
In a medlwil bowl, eombine green
I cuP canned chick~. drained
beans, ·chick peas, red pepper and
~ cup thinly sllcecl s"eet red pep- onion. In a small bowl or cup, co!rlper
.
bine oil, vinegar, mustard, flavor
I small red onion, tbin)y sliced
enhancer, sugar, salt, mint and pepYccup olive oil
per, mix well. Pour over vegetables
v. cup cider vinegar
and toss lightly. Cover. Chill one
1tablespoon prepared mustard
hour before serving. This kltcherl~ teaspoon flavor enhancer
tesled recipe makes 6 servings.
~ teaspoon sugar

Reds begin
cable venture

HEARING TESTS SET

FOURTH GRADE TEI\M - Coach Chuck
Wllliarru; is shown with men.bers of the Racine Royals'
fourth grade team. Players included, left to righ~

The Dail Sentinei-Pa e---7
ByAll-

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�Pag-8- The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, Aprlt15,1911

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
I

.

f '

'

MasOn area news reported

Heath UMW has--~ Easter far~

BY A~ MARSHALL
Easter egg hunt on Saturday at I
Correspoadeut
p.m. tor tne children of the chur·
ches.
·
Services Alluounced
Services are announced for Clifton
Easter Message Swiday
and West Columbia United
MASON - An Easter message in
Methodist Churches all this week song will be presented at 9:45 a.m.
starting on Tuesday evening with on Easter morning at Mason United
services at West Columbia at 7:30 · Methodist Church. John W. Peterp.m.
son's "Hallelujah, What a Savior"
Wednesday evening Prayer Ser· will be directed by Mrs. Lucille
vice and Bible study will commence Swackhamer, pianillt, an.d organist
11i 7 p.m. at Clifton United Methodist is Mrs. Evelyn Proffitt. Narrator
Church. A discussion this day in the will be the pastor of the church, Rev.
last week of Jesus. Mark 14:1·11 ; Bennie Stevens; soloists taking part
Matthew 26 :1·16 ; Luke 7:36-50; John are Gary Stewart and Debbie Rouso.
12:1-3.
Sunrise service at the church will
The Rev. Kenneth G. Watkins will be at 6 a.m. Breakfast Will follow.
be in charge of the services at both
Maundy Thursday Communion
churches.
Service will be held by Rev. Ben
Maundy Thursdl!y Communion Stevens at 7:30 p.m. Everyone is
Service will take place at 7:30 p.m. welcome.
at Clifton United Methodist.
Hlslorical Society
Every,one ill 'urged to attend the
Enjoys Potluck Supper
Good Friday service at 7:30p.m. at
MASON - The Mason Historical
West Columbia United Methodist Society enjoyed a covered dish din·
Church. The Rev. Watkins will wear ner on Saturday evening at the
a costwne at the Good Friday Ser- historic home on Brown Street. The
vice and give first person monologue dining tables were decorated in
of centurion who supervised the keeping the Easter Season.
crucifixion.
·
Rev. Bill Dawson spoke about the
Sunrise services will be held at resurrection. He asked those atboth churches. The service will be tending what Easter meant to them
held at 5:30a.m. at West Columbia in days past and today. He read,
United Methodist and at 6 a.m. at "Were You There?" Prayers were
Clifton United Methodist Church.
offered by the Rev. Dawson, Rev.
After the services, the churches' Kenneth Watkins and benediction by
members will share the fellowship of the Rev. Bennie Stevens.
Easter breakfast in the annex at
Out-of-town guests attending the
Clifton at 7 a.m.
dinner were Mr. and Mrs. Dick
Easter Sunday Worship Service Swackhamer and Amy, and Mrs.
will be held at II a.m.
Harriette Rockewell. Local persons
Each church . will sponsor an present were Rev. and Mrs. Kenneth

An Easter theme Will Carried .
out In the de~otlons and program
of the United Methodist Women
of Heath Church held MOI!d!ly
night at the Middleport Church.·
· Mrs. Billy Jo KraWBCZyn used
"They Shall be as White as
Snow" as her topic. She displayed
branches of a dogWood tree and
read the legend of the dogwood
using scripture from Isaiah.
The program by Mrs. PauUne
Horton was on the ·walk to Emmaus. Sbe displayed pictures of
the disciples and .Jesus walking
and ·told of .the two who walke&lt;l
with Jesus after His resurrectio'1
and how they recognized Him.
Mrs. Grace French read scrip!
lure from Luke 24.
Mrs. Criswell had an article;
"On the Road to Emmaus" which
told of Jesus breaking bread with
the disciples Oft the day of His
resurrection and of those who

Children asked for
poster fare entries
Children of Meigs County are
being invited to make a poster lor
the Community Mental Health Center's "Helping Myself - Helping
Others" Poster Contest. Prizes,
donated by area business, will be
awarded to children from pre-school
through sixth grade.
The children may use crayons,
paints, pencils or cutouts pasted on
paper to make their poster. "We
would like to see colorful posters,"
said Waneta Bowman, the Meigs
Community Mental Health Center
Administrative Clerk who is coor-

dinating the contest.
Entries may be 1..ade on paper
that is at least 20x23 inches but no
larger than " but no larger than
20x28 inches. Posters must be submitted to the Community Mental
Health Center at the Multipurpose
Health Facility on Mulberry Heights
by Apri130.
Winning posters will be displayed
during May, Mental Health Month,
at the library. For more information
about the contest, or lor a copy of the
rules, call the Community Mental
Health Center at 992-2192.

UMW makes donation
A contribution of $25 to the
hospital lund for two children was
made at a recent meeting of the
Reedsville United Methodist Women
held at the church.
Mrs. Verna Rose, Mrs. Sue
Douglas and Mrs. Vickie Keller
were hostesses lor the meeting
opened with prayer by Mrs. Vivian
Humphrey. Scripture was taken
from John 20 and read by Mrs. Barbara Masters who was welcomed in- .
to the UMW. Twenty-seven shut-in
calls were reported, and cards were
signed for several shut·ins: 'Avisit to
the Pomeroy Health Care Center
was planned.
The program led by Mrs. Sandy,
Cowdery was entitled "Events
Leading to the Crucifixion" with
Mrs. Marlene Putman, Mrs. Dolly

Reed, and Mrs. Violet Satterfield
assisting with a short play. The
program closed with a recording of
the Lord's Prayer.
Games were played and prizes
awarded. Refreshm~nts using the
Easter motif were served to Mrs.
Virginia Walton, Mrs. Mary Alice
Bise, Mrs. Masters, Mrs. Erika
Boring, Mrs. Shirley Smith, and
Jonathan Douglas, guests, and
members, Mrs. Humphrey, Mrs.
Pat Martin, Mrs. Mamie Buckley,
Mrs. Reed, Mrs. Sandy Roberts,
Mrs. Satteflield, Mrs. Cowdery,
Mrs. Putman, and Mrs. Lillian
Pickens. Mrs. Bise won the door
prize. Next meeting will be with
Mrs. Buckley and Mrs. Lorraine
Wigal.

Cantata Sunday project by Middleport church

Watkins of Clifton; Rev. ahd Mrs.
BUI Dawson, Rev. and Mrs. Bennie
Stevens, Mr. and Mrs. Willlam ·
Zerkle, Mr. and Mrs. Ruas Barton,
Mrs. Joyce Carson, Mr. and Mrs.
David W. SMith and Sarah Marie,
Mrs. Lucille Swackhamer, Mrs.
Catherine Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Test, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Smith, Mrs.
Alma Marshall, Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Gibbs, Esther MacKnight, Mrs. .
Bessie IRgels and Mrs· Evel:Yn Proffitt

recllgllized Him.
.
vii:e at Heath Church on Friday,
With Mrs. Joan Robinson at the
7:30p.m.,
a sunriae service It 8•
piano, the members SI!Dg "Christ
p'.m,
with
the Eleanor Circle to
is Risen Today." Mrs. French
serve
breftfut.
.
,
had more scripture from Luke
A
rummage
sale
wu
planned
and members sang "He Uves."
for May f. A retreat at Clmp OtMrs. Horton read an article from
terbein wu planned for April Zl
The War Cry entitled "What
andl
24. A motheMiaugbter
ThlnSs" by Gen. Albert Orsborn.
banquet
WBB announced f!!l" May
There was a poem, "Resurre&lt;l- ·
11,
and
May
FellowahiR Day for
tion" with members singing
.
May
1
at,
the
Racln4rBaptlstChur"Christ Arose," the doxology,
cJII, Forty-four sick and shut-in
and closing with pray!!f.
~were reported.
,
,
During the business meetil)g
·
'
'f.he
prealdent
closed
the
conducted by Mrs. Betty Fultz,
~ with prayer from the
Mrs. Robinson thanked the mem"LetlenJ of Easter." Hoslelles,
bers for sending h~r and her
Mnl.
·Beulah McComas, Mrs.
husband, the Rev. Robert Robin·
Grace
French, and Mnl. Terri
son, to a seminar at Athens.
Byer served refreshmenta from a
Reported U1 were Mnl. May
table decorated in a spring motif.
Lambert, Mrs. Bernice Grueser,
~Lambert wu a contributing
Mrs. Eleanor Zieber, Mrs. Ruth
Euler and Edward Blake.
~Meetings announce&lt;i ;n~lnole •
communion service on Thursday

ifSi 1'\.eyneS

speak toon take
wills.
Each and
member
is
asked
a guest
refreshments.
NEW UFE CHOIR to sing at the
Holy Week revival now in progress
at the Syracuse Church of the
Nazarene, 7 p.m. each evening. Services will continue through Sunday.
The Rev. James B. Kittle is the
speaker. Public invited.

Art show successful

recent
of at
thethe
Middleport
Uterarymeeting
Club held.
home of tliliiliiliiiiiiiiiiiilii-illiliiiiiiillliiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiii
Mrs. Richard Owen!·
They are Mrs. Ben Philson,
president ; Mrs. Owen, vice
president; Mrs. Emerson Jones,
secretary; and Mrs. Robert Flsher,
treasurer. Mrs. Dwight Wallace and
Mrs. Forrest Bachtel will serve on
the program committee.
,
The club also approved a return to
the regular schedule oi meetings to
run fi"OIIl October through May, with
members to be scheduled in January
and February, discontinued last
•••• •• ••••I~•••••
year due to weather conditions.
The review of the "Genius of
,
LB
William Blak~" by Sir Geoffrey
Keynes was given by Mrs. Nan
Moore. She described him as a
genius in the field of poetry, art,
engraving, and etchirig. He lived in
the late 1700s and his unconventional
French City
approach to art and poetry WBB not
popular at that time. He was known
61o81b, Avg.
LB. 71111
SMfll( I'AIIA
\tfiLLII
•,~ I I I I I I I I I I 1 I I I I I I I 4 ~ ,
as a craftsman in his fields and his ·
works reflect his view of social Injustices in his day.
Mrs. Moore ead selections from
24 oz. 8 rouqhton
his many poems, some containing
CELERY .~ ......... Bunch.
COTTAGE CHEESE ctn.'l.29 10
lb. Idaho Baking ·
symbols in religion and good and
evil in the world. A discussion was
. 3 Dozen Pack
POTA10ES 'I." .. , Bag ...
held following the review and a
16 oz. Cello ISag
SMAll EGGS ..........'1.99
social hour followed. Nell meeting
lib. Parkay
was announced for April 22 at the
horne of Mrs. Bachtel.
·
MARGARINE ....... Lb.

HOMEMADE HAM SAlAD

An art show was held Tuesday at

the Harrisonville Elementary
School.
.
Students displayed projects which
they have completed during the
year. The projects were collected by
Debbie HiD, art instructor for the
Meigs Local School District, and
judged Monday evening by Kathy
Bachman, a professional. artist ~
Logan.
Projects receiving blue ribbons
will be displayed at the Meigs CoOO:
ty Fair. Ms. Hill plans to develop the
art show into an annual event. She
reports that 50 students received
blue ribbons for their art projects.

ECKRIQf PEPPERLOAF ·~······· .. ····:••
ECKRiat BARBECUE LON ......... ~; ••• '2.69
HAMS

m

1!

EASTER CANDY
.SUPPUES

eMolds e Chocolate
e Easter Baskets

ROUSEL CONFECTIONERY
N. nd Ave.
317
2
Middleport, Oh.
2 6 34 2

or Banq11et Reg.,.

•••••••••••••••••••••••••
3 oz. Regular

•

·

JELLOS ...........,........ ~ ......... 2/69'
21b. Smuckers

3 oz.

Richmond accepted into Slinderella

Mrs. Margie Davis was the month's best loser and received a ribbon
and cub prize at the recent meeting
1i TOPS OH 1456, Rutland. Sbe also
won the "bunny" coilteat. Unda
Bailey wu the weekly wirlner with
Marie Birchfield u her runner-up.
Welcomed into the club were Ruby
Fowler, Bonnie Miller and .Carolyn
Miller. It was repor1ed that Mrs.
Belva Schuler w'u hclllored as Ma.
Mel11 County at the area
recognition day oblervance htid in
Colwnbul S.turday.

INSTANT NESTEA ..........~:~ .......,..

Return from Springfield

bike. Taking a turo oo the bike is Frances Rousb of
Middleport.

Helen Help Us

Pk!l·

(~~iMP~~~.

BUDGET PRICED

'

7'12 oz. Carnation

WALlPAPER
LIVING ROOM

\~·) '

liD ROOM

I
T

KITCHIN
BATHROOM

98 .
D.R.

TOILET TISSUE •••••••••••••••••••••

APPLESAUCE .................... 2/-9*

ORMGE JUICE .... ... ............ 149
Jar

SA VI
AT

IN STOCK
NOW

16 oz. Lucky LuJ

44 oz. T roplcana

.$3'-R.

TO

$119
SPREADABLES • OOOOIOOOOOIO~ .. ••• . ·~ .
BOX

I

.

12 oz. Kreft Mlrac.Je Wlllp ·

S'' NJ DRESSING
1uz. Flmklt

ITI'PIIrt
'.

1

..

Jar$179

lllllteteelllll

...........
..

BY HELEN IIOOTEL
Special Comspoadeal
DEAR HElEN:
I lvive been divorced seven years.
Long exposure to the "m~
market" has convinced me there ',
no such thing 1.!1 an utterly faithful
haaband. You'd expect advances
singles bars (frequented mainly by
married men ), but at work, even ai
church - would you believe the
assistant minilter with the pfei!JlBd
wife? - It's the same. They'rl! all
stalking what they consider "eas~
di.Yorces."
After avoiding the obvious ones, t
finally found a man I thought I could
trust. Four months later, his yet"Ji
much alive wife (she'wL!I s~.
to be dead of cancer) walked in on.~
at a restaurant and almost crmbed
me with a champagne bottle:

sf

choose only married men for my af·
fairs or encounters.
Reasons? They're more generous
and more considerate, as they're out
for a good time and want to impress
me with their man-of-the·
worldliness. Also, they 're more apt
to take me on out-of-town trips. (A
business deal in Acapulco, you
know.)

Being grateful and a little guilty,
they give lovely gifts which they can
afford as they're usually in the
higher income brackets.
Best of all, they don't ruin a
relationship by insisting on
marriage. And the. affair is fun
because there 's an element of
danger in it. Sometimes I almost fall
In love, but catch myself in time.
Hope you don't mind my being AN HONEST WOMAN
DEAR "HONEST":
Your remarks may be honest, but
the chasers? Usually we're not aftelj your actions aren't! A better
their men - they're after us! - IN· signature for you would· be:
NOCENT AND DISILLUSIONED
." Calculating Woman" ... or
DEARIANDD :
"Predator;"- R
Are all married men chasers'! It
may seen! so to a divorcee who DEAR HELEN:
, hasn't much chance to meet the
Thia Ia for the waitrell who says
fal\hful kind; but believe me, most doctors are poor tippers.
they'~ around! You'll be hearini
Perhap11 my doctor husband ill a
frcm them and their wives shortly. rare breed. He overtip~~ and so do I,
- H.
.'
this because we worked very hard to
P.S. On the other hand, not all pul him through medical school and
lingle women are iMocent and undetstand how difficult it is to
chued. Readon:
make ends meet on low salaries.
There are tippers and non-tippers
DEAR HELEN :
in every profesalon. I think the worst
I'm an unencumbered woman who tippers, ,generally speaking, are
wants to llay that way. Therefore I1 women.·- BIG SPENDER'S WlFE

w!:n.~w:es~~:.~~~

•

Community Scope
in Athens in May
ATHENS - Community ~. a
JIOD.pnlftt orpnbation, dedicated to
the 1'111tor11Uon and development of
AU.., wtl1 prelenl the Athens ~
liquesFIIroo May 1, 2and3.
Houn fGr the event wtl1 be Friday.
May 1, &amp;-10 p.m.; S.turday, Mtly 2,
11 a.m.-8 p.m.; Sunday, May 11
a.m.-a p.m.

a,

I

7,.

l'kl·
~................. ~-

t

Rhododendron
tea planned

Are there any faithful
husbands still around?

2 Pack Softweve

Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority wiD stage an

Euler bazur fi'WII t a.m. to 5 p.m.
S.turday at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. A costumed live
"Eutet Buany'' will be on hand to
greet youngstan attendln&amp;. Craftwork, blmemade candy. baked
goods and colored 1111 wtl1 be for
sale. The 1111 will be •uo per
dolen and may be ordered in advance by ciUJDg -.TIIIJ. Orden for
eggs mUll be placed no later than
FridaY:

The Reuter·Brogan Insurance
Agency will close at noon on Friday
in observance of Good Friday.

TRA YEUNG - Meigs CountY seolor cltlzeiul are
travellnl miles tbeae days bit are getllog nowhere.
Popular at tbe senior clllze01 center Is this exercise

Now Ill Ita third year, the Fair wtl1
lellln farnlture, china, primllhw,
IIIII dleanllw ace Nia f.and advii!Ced colllctan.
Will " " • dlllen wW dilpllf
llllr Ml'r Um for .OOW aid lw

.• I'""•
\·-

--- .. - -

.

sale inltde the Oblo UnlversiLy ~Jonvocatloo Center, Athena, Ohio. LUnch will be provided by the Athens
Grance.
Tickell wW be available at the
door for •uo (lflltral adrnluion )
and $1.10 (ltudlnt). Plwale tlcketa
In available fi'WII memben· of
Community Scope for t2. Free
pil'ldn8 invallable. '
Net procteda tram IIIli rient will
be .-I to benlftt YlrliiUII comO It; ....... llaUDnl wlidl HI'Vt
eultunl, artlltle, lllcl . human

dmlCIIIIDM ' llldllvora In 1111
Au.. . ..

MASON - The Mason Historical
Society discussed the forthcoming
annual Rhododendron Tea set for
May 17 at the historic Virgil A.
Lewis home on Brown Street when
the group met on April 17. This old
home has been named to the
National Register of historic places.
A new West Virginia flag and an
American flag is needed to put on
the flag pole which the Mason County Court gave to the people.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Huck,
operators of the Calico Wood Shed,
attended the meeting and displayed
their handmade wood toys and other
items which are for sale.
Mrs. Sarah Spencer presented the
devotionals at the opening of the
meeting at which time Mrs. Lois
Test presided.
It was announced that Mrs. Lee
(Mildred) Gibbs still has books on
the History of Mason for sale.
Mrs. Bliss (Virginia ) Wilson
presented a Wheeler's primer to the
society library.
Those attending read Easter
stories, poems, and Interesting
ilems which made up the program
for the day.
The society Is interested in obtaining information · about the
Adrian College established in 1876.
• The college located in Mason, apparently had a teacher by the name
of Professor Lankeley (the last
name could be slightly misspelled as
the old receipt was hard to read. )
Send infonnation to Mrs. Lee Gibbs, historian, Hartlord, W.Va.
Attending the meeting were Mrs.
Lois Test, president, Mrs. Bessie

Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hedrick
ha ve returned from Springfield
where they were called by the illness
and death of James Hedrick, an uncle, a former resident of Meigs
County.

To meet Thursday night
A meeting of the Democrat
Central and Executive Comrnittees will be held at 8 p.m.
Thursday evening at Carpenter's
Hall, E. Main St., Pomeroy.

Locally owned corporation
The Kingsbury Home Sales and
Service, Inc., is a locally owned
corporation and is managed by
Roger Davis.

Bridal shower for
Ms. Van Meter

The Rock Springs Better Health
Club will meet Thursday at 1:15 p.m.
at the home of Mrs. Lottie Leonard.
The program will be by Wi!metta
Leifheit, and the contest by Lenora
Leifheit.

Worship service set
The Alfred United Methodist Church will hold a special worship service in observance of Holy Week at
7:30p.m. Wednesday .

New arrivals
SHELTON
Howard Donald Shelton Ill was
born April 8 at 9:03 p.m., weight
eight pounds lour ounces, twentyone and one-half inches long, at
Holzer Medical Center, to Donald
and Sherry Shelton.
Grandparents are Bonnie and the
late Donald Shelton, and Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Alley, ali ofGallipolis.

JOHNNY A. BRAWNER, M. D.

Teresa Van Meter, bridH iect of
Randy Houdashelt, WL!I honored
recently with a bridal shower hosted
by Mrs. Roberta Dailey and Mrs.
Bronwyn Williams at the D~ iley
home.
Refresh ments includ ed a
chocolate filled angel food cake and
a strawberry filled angel food cake
topped with whipped cream, nuts,
OHice Hours: 8:30 a.m. · 5:00 p.m.
homemade mints, punch and coffee.
Attending' and sending gifts were
Monday through Friday
Mrs. Gladys Taylor, Mrs. Marie
Dailey, Jean Sexson, Mrs. Adele
FOR AN APPOINTMENT CALL : (614) 992· 5798
Cullwns, Mrs. Marcia Houdashelt,
Mr. and-Mrs. Roger Walker, Mr. and ~---------------------­
Mrs. Eugene Houdeshell, Mrs. Alice
Giobokar, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Roberts, Mr. and Mrs. Greg Erwin
and Tara, Mrs. Don Dailey, Mrs.
Ada Nease, Mrs. Ann Lambert, Mrs.
Mary Guinther, Mr. and Mrs. Gary
EUis, Mrs. Marilyn Miller, Mrs.
Jackie Zirkle, Mrs. Pat Humphrey,
Mrs. Hyllia Eblin, Mr. and Mrs. Pat
Duffy and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Steve Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Mark
O'Dell, Mr. and Mrs. Purl VanMeter
and Greg, Mrs. Ruth Barnhart and
' .
Sherrie, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Brown,
Mrs. Garnet Harbrecht, Mr. and
Mrs. Steve Harrison, Christina
Williams, and Adam Williams.

GENERAL SURGEON

WITH OFFICES LOCATED AT

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, Ohio

r:=· =·:· ~=:-:-:-::-:==:;l
A"srAHLoE~·s~1 M1 =E·. -R· ,.c..~·A:ANLTOG
Mrs. ·Delores Taylor, Mrs. Virginia

"""' "" ""'"' """""""· I

.Wilson, Mrs. Hazel Snrith, Mrs.
Joyce Carson, Mrs. Catherine
Smith, Mrs. Lilah Zerkle, Mrs.
Evelyn Proffitt, Mrs. Mildred Gibbs
and Mr5. Sarah Spencer.

ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY S 1.50

Health Club to meet

Agency to close

WITH FRIES ••••••••• ._ '1
ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

0

The Rutland American Legion
pond is closed to the public due to
vandalism.
Election of officers of the post, Ell
Denison Post 647, bas been set this
year lor May 20 with nomination to
be held on May 6.
The pond is now open to post members and families only.

Holy Week revival
underway at 'Syracuse

A Holy Week revival ill being conducted at the Syracuse Church of the
Nazarene this week. The services to
begin each evening at 7 p.m. will
continue through Easter Sunday.
The Rev. James Kittle-will be the
speaker. The· New Life Choir wiD
present special music Thursday
night.
Completes Army course Sunrise services will be held at the
Sgt. James E. Holman, son of ch.irch Easter morning at 6 a.m.
Catherine A. Holman of Route I, · with the Rev: Mr. Kittle as speaker.
Racine, has cornpleted a U. S. Army Sunday school and worship services
primary leadership course at Fort will be at the regular times.
Polk, La.
·
Students received training in Sunrise services set
Sunrise service set
Sunrise services wiD be held at the
supervisory skills, leadership prin·
Plans for an Easter Sunday ciples and small unit training Bethany, Sutton, and Portland
sunrise breakfast were made when techniques essential to a fi rst-line United Methodist Churches at 6:30
the Koinonia Class of the Pomeroy supervisor in a shop or off ice en· a.m. Easter Sunday. The pastor of
Church of Chrillt met Monday at the vironment.
the churches, the Rev. Mark Flynn,
home of Judi Grogan.
Holman is a recovery specialist at will preach at the Sutton service.
··" Devotions· by Ms. Grogan were Furl Polk.
Jean Trussell, a certified lay
taken from Psalms 100 with an arspeaker from the Sutton Church, will
ticle · on "Changing Times." Craig Thornton graduates
preach at the Bethany service. The
Air Force Airman David L. Thom
Venoy presided at the biJl!iness
youth fellowship of the Portland
meeting. The closing prayer was ton, son of Mr. and Mrs. William L. ,Church will be in charge of the sergiven by Neil Proudfoot. Refresh- Thornton ol30360 Joe Boring, Road , vice there. A breakfast will follow
ments were served to Roger and Langsville, had graduated from the each servi ce.
Charldine Alkire, ADabelle .David· U. S. Air Force avionic navigation r-------- -- son, Ms. Grogan, Neil Proudfoot, systems course at Keesler Air Force
and Craig Venoy. The next meeting Base, Miss.
Graduates of the course were
will be held at the home of Miss
Davidson, May 5.
taught basic na vigation, maintenance olradio and radar avionic,
Locally owned
nav1gation systems , and earned
credits toward an associate degree
It has been reported that in applied science through the ComKingsbury Home Sales, Pomeroy, is munity College of the Air Force.
531 JACKSON PIKE · R1.35 WEST
a locally owned Cor-po rati on,
_ , . 446 -4524
Thornton will now serve at Shaw
managed by Roger Davis.
BARGAIN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
Air Force Base, S. C.
ALL SEAT$ JUST $ !.50

FISH TAIL ..............,,.

C' b
"terary

Legion pond closed

Mrs. Marion French presented a
program on Easter at the reCent
meeting of the Middleport Garden
Club held at the home of Mrs. Arthur
Skinner. She discussed the meaning
of Easter and the ~ignificance of the
season's renewal, noting that the
egg and lamb symbols have very old
beginnings both in the Christian and
non-Christian beliefs. 1\!rs. French
also mentioned the lily of Galilee
· stating that it was probably a small
red lily of the field rather than the
large white lily of today.

SPECIAL Of THE WEEKI

Social
Cakndar

~~te;r;.;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~-~~~~~i GRAPE JELLY ...................... $1.49

Saturday bazaar here

F..aster fm hif?hlight~
garden club meeting

----Installs officers----

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l

TOPS honors losers

A rea activities are reported

at 7:30 p.m., a GOod Friday !IIC~'­

Birthday DiDDer
Hooors Roach
MASON - A birthday dinner wsa
held for Larry Roach at his home in
Mason on Thursday. After dinner
the honoree opened his gilts.
Present were his friends, Martin
Zerkle, Robert MOSBmall, John and
Elaine Sheets, and his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. John Roach and his - L-- - - -- - - - - - - - -- -------'
brother, Roger.
Mason aod area personals
Mrs. Martha Coleman, Chris
Ph. 992·5776 Syracuse; Oh.
Ward, Mrs. Brenda Dadlsmon and
NOW OPEN .FOR
New officers were installed at the on May 3. Barbara Smith wiD have
Brandy of Pataskala, Ohio, Mr. and
SPRING SEASON
Mrs. Terry Henry and sons, Mason, recent meeting of the Catholic charge of preparations for the
• Potted Plants
·
spent Sunday with Mrs. Thelffia Women's Club held recently at the breakfast.
• .complete line of bedding
A deanery meeting was anJlenry.
rectory of the Sacred Heart Church.
'plants and hanging
Installed by the Rev. Fr. Paul nounced for June 7 at the Pomeroy
Mrs. Sarah Spencer spent several
,baskets.
days visiting at the home of her son Welton were Elizabeth Horak, Church beginning at 2 p.m. Prayer
All Dozen Packs ·. tc:.dlozQrt
and daughter-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. president; Barbara Smith, vice by the Rev. Fr. Welton concluded
· Hours:
Dally 9to I
Edward Spencer and daughters at president; Sandy Kovalchik , the meeting.
Bluefield, W. Va.
treasurer; Diana Bartels ,
secretary;
Mark Kunzelman , r-----------_~,....._,__ ___ _ ___ _
Mrs. Russell Barton has returned
home oafter undergoirig surgery at auditor; and Elsie Sutherland,
historian. ·
·
the Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Prayer by the Rev. Fr. Welton
opened the meeting with Catherine
Welsh, retiring president thanking
her officers and other members Of
the ewe for support during her term
of office.
Officers' reports were given and
Mary Kunzelman gave a report on
the spiritual bouquets sent during
THURSDAY
thepastmonth.
39
ROCK SPRINGS BETTER
It was announced that the First
HEALTH CLUB, L: 15 p.m. Thur- Curnmunion breakfast wiD be beld
.
.
sday at the home of Lottie Leonard Jj
1
Program by Mrs. Wiimetta Leifheit,
~U
contest by Lenora Leifheit.
'*'"~ ,;"'W'" WO'*'l,,.
MIDDLEPORT CHILD CON· t "'VK- "'
t tr:...
SERVATION LEAGUE, Thursday,
V
7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Susie
r
Souls by. Karen and Steve Story will
New officers were elected at a

An . Easter cantata, "Hosanna" Gibbs, Alwilda Werner, Nancy An· Center needs janitor
was presented Sunday evening by
Rosemary Lyons, Mary Ann
the Middleport First Baptist Church derson,
McClung, saprano; Marilyn Fultz,
THE Meigs County Senior Citizens
choir and the Young Believers under Nola Swisher, Cathy Riggs, Dreama Center is in need of a part-time
the direction of Mrs. June Kloes.
Hudson, and Darla Thomas, alto; janitor and bus driver. Applicants
Manning Kloes and Jayne Manning Kloes, Dan Riggs; Tom must be fl5 and over, and fall into the
Hoeflich were narrators for the can- . Darst, and John Werner, tenor; and income gUtqeu.ens of $4,738 if
.
tata with Gene Hudson serving as Dan White,1lob Parker, bass.
or$6,263 if married. Applicants must
sound technician for the recorded
Young Believers were Tina East, have their own transpotation to the
music. The prelude was presented Cindy Parker, Phyllis Davis, Bren- Center and be avaUable for work at
by Mrs. Dorothy Anthony with the da Newman, Vicki Boyles, Lori · flexible hours. Applications are
· Rev. Mark McClung giving the in- Kloes, Lynn Kloes, Jayne Hoeflich, available at the Senior Citizens Cenvocation.
Singing in the cantata were and
CraigHouchins,
Darst. Soloi.'lts
Mary
Angela
Randywere
Osborne,
Beulah White, Nora Mills, Nadine Ann McClung, Tom Darst and Cathy
Barton, Marilyn . Williams, Janice Riggs.

Suzanne Richmond was accepted members wer e welcomed.
Into the slim-n-trim program at the Rosemary Randolph lost the most
Tuesday night meeting of the weight and Connie Rankin was run·
Pomeroy .Slinderella Class. Joyce ner-up. Helen Grimm and Kim Hall
Haggy lost the most weight and Ann lost the most weight and Pauline
Lyons was runner-up and also . Lievlng, Melissa Hoffman and
received her 20 pound weight loss Shirley Tucker were runners-up at
ribbon.
the Mason Class.
At the Chester class, four new

The Daily Sent;nei- Pag-;

n

~

Sears

•

.

A FITTING GIFT
FOR DAD

Phont "2-1171

101 W. Moln St.

Prayer meeting Sunday
Acounty-wide prayerln""tilll! has
been set for Sunday at 2 p.m. at the
Hysell Run HolineliS Church with
Glen Bissell as cla"-!1 Ieeder.

Pomeroy, Oh.

OWNED AND OPERATED BY
Jick &amp; Judy Williams
Open : Mon. thru Wed. t-5
Thur. 9· 12. FrL 9· 5, Sol. 9· 2

Satlstoctlon Guoron!Md
or Your Mon\! l' 8 \(k

- ,----------"'----l--

- --

-- -

--

BEND AREA OPlOMEMEJRIC CENTER

Th• s good ·looki ng casual style
1111rn Fillrsha•m •s t ~e p e rfP. ~ t ~1 ft 10 rem md him of you

I. H. BILLMAN ·II, OJ).

w1 th evtH y step he take s.

Provides Such Strvicn As

VISION IXAMINATIONI
HARD AND lOfT CONTACT UNIII
OPEN M. -T.·W.·'· t-5
CLOSED THUR.·SAT. ·SUN.
' 113 Court St.
Pomnry, Oh.
Above Clark's Jewelry in Pomeroy

POMPANO.

..... _

'•

HARTLEY SHOES, INC.

m-mo
.,

•

�..

.. ~

..

Wednesday. April-15;1981,

FBI man .discusses·:rote··as
invistigdting agency here
,

The FBI- and its role as an investigating agency ws diBcw8ed by
Ellis, senior resident agent in
Athens office, who spoke Friday
a luncbeon meeting of Return
~:~·Meigs ·Chapter of the .
of the American
held at the Meigs Inn.
Ellis emphasized that the agency
is not a protecllon agency nor a
national pollee force, but is caUed in
investigate facts _In crime that are
under federal jurisdiction. He'.said
that the FBI is restricted by law to
Investigations under the Department of Justice.
Ellis noted that the field officer do
give' services to local law enforcement groups if. the act Involves
interstate acts such as criminals
wanted who have gone to other
states. He pointed out that the FBI
· does not have the responsibility for
protection of the president of the
United States but If a president Is
harmed or attacked, then the FBI
begins investigation of the facts of
the case. ·
The FBI investigates coun·
terfeiting, bank robberies, kid- -

~

COIIIPETE - These Meigs High School studenls
recently competed In sectional competition at the
Lawrence County Joint Vocational School. The studeo18 are enroUed In trade and industry programs at
Meigs High School. Contesls entered Included radio
and television; hand calculator; cosmetology, and

welding. Studenls who placed first or second will have
the opportunity to go to state competition and Include
Penny Miller, Ed Lester and Richard Brown. The
Meigs group Includes, front, I tor, Elmer Young, Pen.ny Miller, Denise Cobb, Ed Lester; back, I to r, Dick
King, Tony Jewell, Carla Rife, Joy Hudson, Richard
Brown and Victor Painter.

.Kim Spanos named Children 's
Services Coordinator for
Ohio Valley Area Libraries
Ohio Valley Area Libraries announces the appointment of Kim
Spanos as Children's Services Consultant. Spanos will co-ordinate services to children among II
southeastern Ohio Public Libraries,
including the Meigs County Public
Library.
Ms. Spanos comes to OVAL from
Towson State University, Towson,
Maryland, where she was
curriculum librarian and instructor
of children's literature. Ms. Spanos
also has e•perience as a school
media specialist in Baltimore County, Maryland, and as a children's
librarian at the Enoch Pratt Free
Library in Baltimore. She received
her Master's Degree in Library
Science from Rutgers University in
New Brunswick, New Jersey .

As Children's Consultant at OVAL;
Spanos will supervise the development of circulating collections of
educational toys fur preschool
children at the Meigs County Public
Library, the Jackson City Library,
and the Sylvester Memorial Public
Llbrary in Wellston. With Ms.
Spanos' assistance and grant funds
from OVAL, the Logan-Hocking
County District Library, the Herbert
Wescoat Memorial Library, and the
Chillicothe and Ross County Public
Library will initiate services to
youn!illlll!lts. Special collection of
materillllf on parenting will be
placed in the Portsmouth Public
Library and in the Nelsonville
Public Library.
In addition to working as a con-

Wins 1981 U, S.
dritl team award
The United Stales Achievement
Academy announced today that
Sheryl Bush has been named a
United States Drill Team Award
winner for 1981.
Sheryl was
nominated by the
Eastern High
School Drill Team
Director James ,!
Wilhelm for the
·
national award .
The Academy
selects the USDBUSH
TAA winners upon the exclusive
recorrunendation of the drill team
director and the officials' standards
for selection as set forth by the
USAA. Sheryl joins a select few drill

team members nationwide so
honored by the Academy.
The criteria for selection includes
academics, sportsmanship, citizenship, leadership, drill team ability,
enthusiasm, poise and projection,
pride in . personal appearance,
res)!Onsitiility, and attitude and
cooperative spirit.
She will appear in the United
States Achievement Academy official yearbook published nationally.
Sheryl is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Louis Bush and her grand·
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Bert
Grueser and the late Dana M. Abies.
Jr., and Elis Bush of Mason, W. Va.
and the late Hallie Bush.

Fifty years of music
theme of area meeting
A program entitled "Fifty
Years of Music" was presented
by Mrs. Clara Lochary at the
Thursday night meeting of the
Preceptor Bets Beta Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority held at
the Riverboat Room of the
Diamond Savings and Loan Co.
Mrs. Lochary talked of her
years of teaching in rural Meigs
County Schools and of the many
piano students she has had
through the years.
The Founder's Day dinner to be
held on April 30 at the Sportsman
in Athens was noted. The first

meeting in May will be a
progressive dinner starting at the
home of Mrs. Velma Rue at 6
p.m., then going to the horne of
Mrs. Ruby Baer, and then on to
Norma Custer's home. New officers will be installed. Plans
were also made for a·picnic to be
held on May 21.
.
The state convention was announced for June 2, 13 and 14 at
Toledo with reservations to be
turned in by May 15 to Mrs. Rue.
Hostesses for the meeting were
Mrs. Janet Theiss and Mrs.
Lillian Moore.

I

'

nappipgs, _hi·jacklngs, and illegal Fry, Mary Roush, I.ou1a Leurs, Coruse of the Red Cross emblem, Ellis . della Nibert. Barbara Chapman of
notes. He 1181d they investigate more · Syracuse was a1Bo i guest.
"white collar drimes" and noted
Reporta oo the state cccoollllfaeane~n-.ce
that mo're money is embezzied from were given by M~-s . .- Sudra
banks today by employes than by Luckeydoo, who served u periGll8l
robbers.
·
·
pagetotherecordlngsecretary. Tbe
Ellis talked about the age of COlD" chapter wu given a blue rlbl!on for
pulers noting that records of known . the program and a certificate of
criminals are on · ~OIJlputer and honor for conservatioo P!'lllll'IJIII. It
available to law enforcement of: wasalsoratedbighonpubUcll)'. . ,
ficials. The ·FBI. agent also talked
Named to the nominating cornabout· the increasing nwnber of mittee were Mrs. Paul Eicb, Miss
women now serving with the FBI Eleanor Smith, Mrs. Lochary, and
and their role In the investigation of Mrs. Emerson Jones. Mrs. Robert
corruption by public officials as wen . Ashley reported that the DAR
as the background of presidential National Library has acknowledged
appointees.
the gift of a ~eigs County Hlatory
The business ·meet\llg opened In Book given by Mrs. Asbley.
ritualiBtic form with Mrs. Gene Yost
Hostesses were~· A. R. Knlgbt,
and Mrs. Patrick Lochary, regent Mrs. Patrick Lochlry, ~ ~
and chaplain of the chapter. ce Struble, Mrs. Joseph 'COOk and
Recognized were the guests from the ·M.s. Gerald Powell. Spring flowers
Col. Charles Lewis Chapter of Point decorated .the tables. Favors from
Pleasant, Mildred Gibbs, .Janet Quality Print, Landmark, Racine
Roberts, Ruby Carter, Dora Tony, Bank, Bank One, the Farmers Bank,
Evelyn Proffitt, Cleo Uevlng, Ruth Wamer Insurance and Brogan InRhodes, Kathryn Faudree, Anna surance were given to those atProffitt, Helen Sterrett, Mildred' tending.
·

New arrivals
DIDDLE

Mr. and Mrs. Edward Piddle,
Rutland, are announcing the birth of
their first child, a son, Robert
Lawrence, bom on March 3!' at the
Pleasant V~lley.Hospiial. The infant
weighed seven pounds, eight ounces
and was 2:l inches long.
·
Maternal grandparents are Mrs.
Nellie Hysell, Rutland, and the late
Lawrence Hysell. Maternal greatsultan!, Kim Spanos is an ac- grandmother is Mrs. Walter Hysell,
complished storyteller. She is a
member of the National Association Bashan.
The paternal grandparents are
for the Preservation and PerMr.
and Mrs. Robert Pooler, Midpetuation of Storytelling, and is
dleport;
Mr. and Mrs. Waid Diddle,
especially interested in traditional
Lllrkllls
Lllwrenee
Van
Lear,
Ky. Great-grandparents
and local folklore and music. When
boldlag
bla
lnfulsllter,
Melody
are
Oval
Diddle,
Mrs.
Marie
Roy,
not in libraries or reading, she can
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Delmar
Larkins
of
Lomlne.
Racine,
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Danny
be found pursuing one of her many
interests: cooking, baking, hiking, Pooler, Chesterhill. Mrs. Minnie Cheshire.are announcing the birth of
dancing, creating clothing, and spin- . Jackson, Middleport, is a paternal their daughter, Sarah Beth, born on Clarence Wolfe and the late Charles
March 8. ·She weighed six pounds, II E. Larkins, and Mr. and Mrs. Ranning wool. She is tnlerested in lear- great-grandmother.
ounces
and was 20 inches long. Mr. dall Peck. Great-grandparents are
ning how to garden, can foods, and in
LAWRENCE
and
Mrs.
Larkins have another Mr. and Mrs. ' Bill Frye, Mrs. Clara
learning rockclimbing.
Mr and Mrs. Melvin Lawrence daughter, Angela Dawn, severi·.
Beck, and Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Monahan.
Spanos will live in Jackson. She are announcing the Feb. 9 birth of
their
rtaughter,
Melody
Lorraine,
at
.-----~----------------­
replaces Jane A. McGregor, formerly of Jackson, who retired in the }1olzer Medical Center. She
December 1980 after more than 30 weigh~'(! eight pounds, six ounces
Now Open For Spring Season
years of service to children in Ohio and w~s 22 inches long. Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence have a son, Jeremy Joe,
public libraries.
nine.
• Easter Flowero • Polled Mums • Lilies • Hydrangeas
Maternal grandparents are Jack
• Caladiums eAzaleas • Tulips • Daffodils
and Beverley Codner, Racine, and
the great-grandparents are Laurie
Band banquet planned
Crook and the late Beverley L.
TO
Crook
Glendale,
Arizona.
Clarence
EAST MEl GS - Plans for the anHANGING BASKEtS
,.,~o~
nual band banquet on April24 will be and Iv~ Lawrence of Portland are
6"1 811 1 &amp; 10"
the pat mal grandparents, and Mrs.
made aLa meeting of the Eastern Franc' Hawthome of Portland is a
21 TO
Local Band Boosters to be held at great-great-grandmother. •
7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the band room
Bar~ra Lawence and Sandra
of the high school. Officers for the Codner hosted a shower for the inSPECIAL! While They Lasl
Flat
Fl 1
next school year will also be elected.
fant wi~ relatives and friends atten\Ungl
Open Daily 9 to 8, Sundays I to 5

IASTIR SPECIALS

'600

Bedding Plants
IN Ali VARIETIES

'2

PANSIE~eg:$7.001

ASTROGRAPH
April16, 1981
You' re the type who strives to
be independent and doesn't like to
rely upon others . Fortunately,
however , this coming year you
will have the right people to lean
on when you need them .
AR IE 5 (March 21-April 19)
Y ou r
understanding
of
propositions brought to you today
may not initially be accurate.
Pause to gather all the facts, then
your judgment will be wise.

TAURUS (April 2G-May 201
Take time to lhink your steps
through before tackling compl icated projects loday _You' re a
gOOd worker once you
everyth ing organized .

get

GEMINI !May 21 -June 20) You

may have some annoyances to
contend with ear ly in the day, but

things should smooth out by af·

ternoon . Hang loose for fun times

ahead.
CANCER (June 21 ·July 221
Ways can be found tOday to

resolve a situation which has
been disturbing you . Luck may
have a hand in bringing about a

happy ending.
LEO (July

Somethin g

23-A ug.

unexpe cted

22)
may

develop today which could spell
personal gains. II has more
potential than Is obvious at first
glance, so study it careful I'; .

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22)
You're likely to be cleverer and

'5~

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE

more torlunate than usual today
In turning unproductive
situations around into something
more to your liking.
Lt:BRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 231 Con·
dill ns are taking a turn for the
bel er. Unmanageable situations
will be back in your control once

Ph. 992·5776

Syracuse, Oh.

~.95

aga n. Assert yourself.

(Oct. 24-Nov. 221
comes to him who
waiJS and this principle works in
you~ favor today. Others will be
busy shifting things around for
your ulllmale benefit.
SAGITTARIUS !Nov. 2l·Dec.
21 l Business and pleasure tend to
blend well for you today . If you're
trying lo swing a big deal, discuss
11 in other lhan a commercial at·
mosphere.
CAPRICORN !Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Youtmay not be able to achieve
ali y u hoped to today on your firstet orl, bul'don't let this dlsap·
point you. Marshall your forces.
Char.ge a second time for victory,
AqUARIUS (Jon. 2G-Feb. 191
This 1should be a successful day
beca~se of your ability to treat
dlsl rblng
's ituations
philo ophicaliy. Your attitude is
awinner.
.
PI~CES (Feb. 2G-March 20)
You ~au ld be' In for a pleasant
surp~lse today when someone
usuallY not supportive of you
ralll.s to your banner. You've
galne!:t a valuable ally, ·
S~ORPIO
Ev~ryth i ng

ted by the children a_nd adults of the
Morning Star United Methodist
Church Saturday evening, 7:30 p.m.
The Rev. Florence Smith invites the
~----------------~--p~u_bl_lc_.______________~

. PATOKA; Ind. (AP)- Coal miner the l)ig~r pay and benefits the Wheri Mrs. Hull and her son looked was the union. Well, was it worth · :
.
John Hull· klued his wife · Karen mines offered. Hull went to work in inside, they found his gun, stili rt?''
goodbye early one February nior- an AMA)C mine in Oakland City.
Other letters told of loneliness and
loaded, under the seat. He had never
ning In 1978, · put on his jacket, · Their early married years were taken it out.
fear. "I miss you so much. ...
paused for a moment ll(ld came back · stormy, · Mrs. Hull said. Hull
For weeks, "I screamed and I Everything is so awful .... If I could
sod kissed her again.
provided well and worked hard, but cried," his wife said. "I guess I just justfeel secure again for one day ... "
Today, three years later, Karen having played hard and married went crazy. But I found that you
·Mrs. Hull spent two years
Hull l'CI\lembers that extra kiSs. young, he couldn't seem to settle can't stay crazy. You either have to secluded in her house, the house she
Hull, a member li the United Mine down~ He spent more time with his get better or worse."
would have lost if miners hadn 'I set • :
Workers, never made It home.
friends than with his family. And his
Time helped, she said, as did up a trust fund. Hull had worked in ; :
. On Feb. 3, 1978, midway through a allegiance to his union made him writing him letters, tales on lined the mines just three months short of: lll-day UMW strike, Hull was killed miss too many birthdays and an- notebook paper of Jove, grief and bit- the 10 years required for a UMW ~:
in an 'exchange 0! gunfire at the non- niversaries.
widow to receive pension benefits. ;~
terness.
·
union 'Bowersock Mine. Men at the
As difficult · as it was, "my
This year; she is getting out more.:;
'She was bitter, she said, when she Robbie and Maxi are 16 and 14, and : ·
·scene told Mrs. Hull her husband husband and I were the very best of
was shot as he stOod on a knoll bet- friends," she said. "He'd tell me the learned Hull's mine had closed and she's taking a real estate course at ;;:
ween the non-union miners and · truth about things and I'd bear with realized he had known au along, Vincennes University. She is also ~
even as he walked the picket lines, dating a man - a coal miner - and ;..
UMW picketS wltil had been trying to him."
·
shut the mine down.
Pasted together with Jove and that he would soon have been out of a though she still cries, "it's a good : :
A grand jury returned no in- .patience, their fragile bond held. "I job. " Now I realize you weren't cry now," and most days, she's able· :
·
•·
dictments. No orie was ever charged told John I had one dream in Ufe," fighting for your job," she wrote. " It to stop.
with Hull's slaying.
she said. " I wanted a home, and I 1- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - "l've been on that hillside with wanted him to settle down and act
him a thousand times in my dreams like he loved me."
during the past three years," Mrs.
In 1975, Hull set to work on the
Hull, 34, said this week. And now the house - and himself. "When we.
Exciting New Styles
current United Mine Worlters strike built that home, he decided it was
is bringing back the memories.
, . time to grow up, " Mrs. Hull said.
Curled In an armchair in the rural From then on, his pickup truck ratPatoka home Hull built in 1975, his tied into the driveway after work
snub-nosed, blue-eyed widow talked every day.
about the curly-haired miner who
Late on Feb. 2, 1978, Hull had a
loved his family, his friends and his call from a fellow miner. He hung up
union.
the phone, cleaned his .22-caliber
Theirs was a high school romance handgun and put it in his truck.
between a·shy countl')l girl of 14 and
His wife asked about the gun. "I
a handsome 1&amp;-year-{)id who "drove said, 'If you go out In the morning,
too fast, drank a little beer and·liked and they see you with a gun or your
too many girls," she recalled.
friends with guns, somebody's
'
But
his
good
looks
and
good
humor
bound to get hurt."' Hull told her he
.PEACEFUL PICKET LINES -: SIDce '\he Uolted MiDe .rkers of
captivated her, and in the summer probably wouldn't even take the gun
America slrlke began March Z7, Virginia Slale Pollee have reported Utile .
after her sophomore year, the sum- out of his truck.
activity or picket lines In southwest VIrginia's .coaifielda. In thiB picture,
mer Hull graduated from high ' After Hull kissed her goodbye, she
a ilate trooper oo picket line duly compares whittling sllck.s with a
school,thetwoteen-agerseloped.
went back to bed. But she awoke
striklngmioer. (APLaserpboto) . .
She was pregnant by year's end. feeling nervous, and when two of his
They found an apartment, son Rob- friends drove up, she knew
bie was born-and his young ·father something was wrong. By the time
took a job in a Princeton factory.
. she reached the doctor who conIt was Mrs. Hull who persuaded firmed the news, the story of. her
Cbristian Diehl, dec. to Binda Thomas J. Martin, Myra L. E. Mar- ber pusband to become a miner. By husband's shooting death was
· 1968, they had a second child, a already on local radio stations.
Diehl, Robert Diehl, Cert. of trans., tin, !'acre, Sutton. _
Virginia Vitatoe Hartley to daughter named Maxi, and needed
Rutland.
Friends drove Hull's truck home.
Albert Van Cooney, Marie Van Leading Creek Conservancy Dis!.,
Cooney to Charles A. Van Cooney, ·Ease., Salisbury.,
The ·
Janice N. Van Cooney, 1.13 acres,
Cecil L. Stacy to Leading Creek
Cons. Dist., Easement, Salem.
Salisbury.
Clara Jean France to Leading
Bernard F. Fultz, Betty J. Fultz to
Kenneth D. Cooke, Jean Cooke, Lots, Creek Cons. Dist., Ease., Salisbury.
Charles Eskew, Frances Eskew to
Middleport.
Bernard V. Fultz, Belly J. Fultz to Leading Creek Cons. Dist., Ease.,
Loc1ted in the Point Pleasant Inn Ruth B. Amold, Judith A. Arnold, Salisbury.
RING
Stanley 0. Duckett, Leona G.
Lot, Middleport.
Rl. 62 North
Point Pleasant
Wendelyn Sue Wooten to Dean R. Duckett to Leading Creek Cons.
Dist., Ease., Salisbury.
VERSATILITY IS THE NAME
Wooten, Divorce Decree, Salem.
PENDANT
PENDANT
Mary Lou Cuckler, dec. to William
Minnie Wooten, Affidavit, Salem.
OF
THE
GAME
AND
THE
' Anderson Wooten, dec. to Minnie R. Cuckler, Patricia L. White, Debra
:. R. Wooten, David Wooten, Dean C. Cuckler, Randi G. Cuckler,
STEVE YATES BAND
Raymond E. Cuckler, Cert. for
. Wooten, Cert. of trans., Columbia.
COVERS IT ALL.
7 Larry Fields, Linda Fields to trans. , Bedford.
ve Yate~
' Walter F. Roush, Anna L. Roush,
Also Available In Round,
• Lots 3and 4, Sutton.
Playing Wednesday · ·Saturday Each Week , 9 · 2 a.m.
House of Prayer and Praise Inc. to
: Frankie Stafford, dec. to Hubert
Heart, Pear &amp; Marquise
; Stafford, Cert. of trans., Salisbury- Uberty Christian Church, .626 acre,
-Introducing Draft Beer •t Popular Prices!
Pomeroy.
-Happy Hours p.m. to ap..m. . Mixed Drinks 2for the Price of I
• Rutland.
-Ladies night Thursday- All mixed drinks 2for lhe price of 1
Charles R. Mash, Anna Lee Mash
', Betty Adams, dec. to Bobliy Joe
to Katheryn Cook, 2.94 acres,
~· Adams, Sr., Cert. of trans., Sutton.
New Sunday Restaurant Hours
; Clarence B. Weese, dec. to Gordon 5alisbury.
Gary L. Fife, Kathy Fife to Clara
;, A. Weese, John Mills Weese, Paul
11 a.m. To 3 p.m.
~ean
France, Lot, Middleport.
: Harrison Weese, Cert. of trans.,
Weekend Special • Ham Dinner $3.95
Charles R. Mash, Anna Lee Mash
: Meigs.
Fum~ure
Roberta C. O'Brien, J. B. O'Brien Jo Ala dine J. Baker, Seldon J.
Chi ldren 12 t;; under Pav 3• Per Lb..
MIDOLE PORT, OHIO
• to Pamela Henry, Michael O'Brien, ·Baker, 2acres, Salisbury.
Charles A. Musser to Judy · C.
' Patrick O'Brien, Peggy O'Brien,
RESERVATION OPTIONAL 675-6276
Musser, 45 acres,,Rutland.
• Parcels, Olive. .

'

DIAMOND CLUSTERSI

THE MUSIC
SHOWCASE
.

CANOY'S CLASSIC COu.ECTIONS
lngel's
&amp; Jewelry

::~ Sue
James
Fredrick
Butcher,
Jennifer
Butcher
to Dano
King, Joan
Ann
King, 10 acres, Rutland.
.: Albert L. Martin, Frances E. Mar! tin to Thomas J . Kibble, Suzaooe
• Kibble, 1.012 acres, 30' Easement,
~ Chester.
• Roger L. Walker, Ariwona Sue
.. Walker to Roger L. Walker, Ariwona
: Sue Walker,_rt. Lot439, Pomeroy.
: Eber R. Reiber, Ruth M. Reiber to

_ _ _ _ _ _ _.:_~-:----.J~=~==:::::~~==~=?=:~~=~~====~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::::=

f

9}!~
11 1 F

0 !/IJ' fJII}Ir!:!S June J(J /98 !

MAIN

.•

•~

•
• WILKESVIllE - A project to
• meet customer requeals for new and
~ imProved grade! of service haa.been
~. started

here, General Telephone Co.
.: More than S32,300 haa been
'budgeted to Install caU-!lwltching
equipment that will add 100 new
~cust~r Unes, said Larry Ghearing
~ li Jackson, customer service
manager.
,
'- The nwnber of calling · paths to
~ Jackson and McArthur alBo wiD be
~ of Ohio announced today.

POMEROY

II l:lf_,

I

UNBELIEVABLE!
.You Can Purchase This Nice 3 Piece Bedroom Suite
For Only
As ASpecial Bonus We'll

increased.
' '
: The new equipment is desljpted to/
f".

'39995

• accommodate future growth 111 the

' ~re-mlle area of Jackson and
~ Vinton Counties ~ the mid• lllllOB.

••

•

• Go\', JIIJIII A. Rhodii1J1110U111.'1d
: 1 . . . li 1111 Ia- Ill
:IGtllitW tll...~.. II
: a.q·pra. md b)' tile aur.u Gf
:• 110t11ru"
Vlllldll far dMIIrlllllllalliD •
uoo~- ,__,1 ...__ II
~
'1:1'

Il ,..._ .......

•11111 '' aut 1t 11

.-,aus.

.'

Give You AFree Nite Stand To Match.

t

; Meigs receives ·'
•
:,lice1111e. monies
'

CHAPMAN'S SHOES·
'

~

~. budgets

t

J ,-----(~

ssg95

ssg'JS

: prOJ~Ct

Come in with this ad to
get the $69.95 offer.

Black. White, Bone, Taupe,
---- Red, Wine, Naw

•

SJ9'1S

•

Siladium ' class rings from ArtCarved are made
from a jeweler's line stainless metal. Stronger,
lighter and more durable than gold, its brilliant
luster lasts (orever.

30%0FF

A rwnmage sale was planned for
May 4 and 5 with the place to be anIIOIIIICed later. Refreslunenls were
served by NOITIII and Rita Wiiwn.

'•

Property transfers ·

'•

CONnNUIS THIU SATURDAY
Sfl FCT GROUP OF CONNIE .MD
F001Y«HtKS DRESS Stm

A successful Easter bazaar was
reported when the Willing Workers
Mlaaionary Society of the First
CJwrch of God, Syracuse, met recently. Joy Clark had the opening
prayer, and acting president, Jan
Jenklna, read scripture from Eph. 5.
The secretary's and treasurer's
reports were read by Virginia Oiler.

Latest strike brings bad memories

....'
.,.,
.,..,

;General

JIRTQl~Yf.P. ·

CHAPMAN'S PRE-EASTER SALE

Bazaar deemed success

The Daily Sentinel Page-11

••
•'

&amp;ster fare Saturday
At! Easter program will be presen-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.....

.4.Piece Suite
• 58" Triple 6 Drawer Dresser
• Sl)elf Hutch Mirror

• 5 Drawer Chest
• Queen or Full Panel Headboard

•Free Nite :itand When You
Purchase 4-Piece Suite.

THIS SUITE IS WELL WORTH 1200." MORE THAN WE ARE SELLING IT FOR •
COME SEE THIS BARGAIN, ONLY A FEW TO SELL.

MASON FURNITURE CO.
Herman Grate, Owner

,173·5592

Mason, .W.Va.

�.. __

..

..

,_,

.~

-· .,. .,.

r ~

. , ,.

... .. r

.••

...

•

..

Pagt-12 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Wednesday,,Aprll15, 1911 .
llfll)~ ID'il ~ TH.lTSCRAMIL!D WORD GAME

Television
'

~ \l/) ~~ *
'

by Henri Arnold end Boll L.oe

.

•
•
VIewmg

.

, APR .

11i, 11181
EVENING

8:00

(]) e ('l) DCIJ®J(j})QI

NEWS
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(!;,ONTINUED FROMOAYTIIIE) •
Cll
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
Cll ABC NEWS
Cll FREESTYLE
fill OVER
EASY 'Middlo· Agod .
Child 1 Host: Hugh Downs. (Closed . CaptiOned; U.S.A.)
· 8:30
NBC NEWS ·
CIJ BOB NEWHART SHOW
(I) PROGRAM UNANNOUNCED
D Cll @) CBS NEWS
(f) WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
fill LILIAS, YOGA ANO YOU
(i}) Gl ABC NEWS
8:5B (]) CBN UPDATE NEWS
7:00
PM MAGAZINE ·
(]) NEW BIBLE BAFFLE SHOW
CIJ ALLIN THE FAMILY
(l) (j})IIJ FAMILY FEUD
(J) 'WILD KINGDOM 'Tra;ring I he
Desert Outlaw'
D Cll TIC TAC DOUGH
(f) l1lJ
MACNEIL·LEHRER
REPORT
@)NEWS
7 :30 Cil8 BULLSEYE
CIJ AT HOllE WITH THE BIBLE
· &lt;!J BOXING'SBEST:JACKDEMP·
SEY From hobo to heavyweight
champ of the world, relive Oemp aey 'acareerthrough vintage 1920
film clips .
CIJ SANFORD AND SON
CIJD Cil JOf&lt;ER'SWILD
Cl) HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
(f) DICK CAVETT SHOW
@) NAME THAT TUNE
fill DICK ·CAVETT SHOW Guest:
Jane Lapotaire, actress .
(i})GI FACE THE MUSIC
7 :58 (]) CBN.UPDATE NEWS
'
B:OO Cil D CZl REAL PEOPLE Sa rah
Purcell takes part in a roller derby .
and John Barbour talks with a men
whose hobby is g oing through ·
famous people 's garbage . (60
mins.)
(Closed-Captioned;
U.S.A.)
CIJ SIGHTS AND SOUNDS OF
LIFE
eD NIGHT GALLERY
CIJ(j})IIJ THE;..GREATESTAMER·
I CAN HERO R81uctant superhero
Ralph Hinkley tangles h ilariously
withan enemy s ubmarineafterone
of his pretty pupil' s wa cky mother
wr eaks ha\IOC with an espionage
op eration and nea rl y g e ts killed .
(60 m;n 8 .)
O Cil ENOS
(f) HALL OF FAME'DearL;ar' The
legendary 40--y ear c orrespon dance between George Bernard
Shaw and British actress Beatrice
Campbell is brought to the stage in
th is two-a ctadaptationbyJerome
Kilty . The product ion stars Edward
Herrmann and Jane Alexander. (90

CIJ

\'

'

me(IJ

YOU &amp;~Wil.Lir.J (;

TiLl.

HAT TO

MOl) Tll!iH

YO~ I!&gt;ET

I WILl.!
HERE:-· TAKe IT.
LONG JOHIIJ i

rJ r J
tCLAICO

IJ

me

\Ut&gt;..Te;R I
et..IU.TI&lt;JGI
JIFFY L.Q&amp;...\1 ...

(b/;61

-HA! LOOK I'IHO'G -S!JT IT I'IAG ·
CAU.INQ YOO STUPIP!
A6000
ME! THE CRaTOtl Of
IDEA, OR.
WHLU IDIOTIC
LIXIR.!
1•.:••11 A11:MiiE/t~ /PEAl

VIAS IT? 1'0 HOPED THAT THOOE
EMfiAaED IN MEDICARE FRAUO
l'iOLW SHAPE UP ONCE THEY
KHEW SOMEOHE WAG AFTER.
THEM! - BUT HAVE THEY'?

HE~ S!JllOY/

J THINK 50"'

•.

how

it is

the

(IJ) HALL OF FAME 'Oearliar'Tha

first
~y

tna

new

place!

I'VE A FEW
iMPORTANT CALl.9

'

.

,

CONSUI!l.01 WtiY
'lOU VISIT
v.nH weNOY OR
t'O

~1T

..::;;::::=:"'\ 10 /MI&lt;E. IU ilEE
'IOU LATER !

BIRDIE, 6Ei IfF
THE I N'!E~NAT~L
OPERATOR! 11\'f ~
TO 6ET IN 'TOUCH
WITH BILL !! !i

'

'
'''
'.'

.'

Given the state of today's economy. more and more; people are
demanding more from their bank . With this in mind. we at Central
Trust recently took a long. hard look at what you want. And in doing
so developed an important new concept in bank in~ We call it The
Financial Center. And the idea behind it is really verv simple. To provide you with the widest range of convenient. innovq:~tive financial
services you'll find anywhere. So it you 're looking tor ways to make
smart use of your money. stop by Central Trust today and find out
how our many services can be of. use to you you'll fin·d all our
people are committed to helping you get the most tor your money
through personal. professional serv1ce At Central Trust.
we think it's fine if you wont to call us your bank . But you
should really·start thinking of us as,your .fina·ncial center- ·

Some of the many services
offered by Central Trust include
accounts that pay interest on
your checking /Easy-to-read
combined monthly statements/
A variety of checking and
savings plans/ Money-market
certificates/ Established Trust
services /And a wide range of
consumer loans.

, .
''

Oi:MOTHER
HUBBARD
WENTTOTH'
CUPBOARD

WHEN SHE
GOT THERE
TH'CUP80ARD
WAS BARE

"

legendary 40·vear correspondence between George Bernard
Si"&lt;~~w and Briliah actress Beafrl·
v ampbell i s br o u~ht to the ata~e In
th latwo·a ct adaptation by Jerome
Kilty . The pro duction alara Edward
Herrmann and Jane Ale xander. (90
mlna.)
V:3D Cil e CZJ THE FACTS OF LIFE A
joyride in a stolen van ends at the
pollee stat ion lor some of the girls
from the Ea stland school. (Repeat)
(ft. I of a two·part episode)
(]) MOVIE -(HORROR) ••11
" Dracula" 1SJ78
CIJ MARK RUSSELL COMEDY
SPECIAL Amer ica ' s madcap
comic performs live on Income T •~
Day from the State Uni versity of
New York at Buffalo . The new
admlniatration givea Rusaell a
whole new set of targets for hi a outraV!_oua allnga and arrows.
10:00 CIJ• Cll OUINCYQuiAcy'oacolab
te chnician,
Sam
Fujiyama , ·
develop a a proc ess by which he
proves that a suspe c ted rapist
c an 't be guilty be cause his teeth
don ' t mat ch tho se that left bite
markaonthera pe victims. (Repeat;
60nUna .)
({) (ft) •
VEGAS Dan's clionl
wantaonly to lind the ml!ln who killed
her husband during a restaurant ·
holdup, but Dan 'a cracker)ack in·
veatlgatlon also uncovers a casino
skimming operation, blackmail and
exlonloA. (60 miAo.)
Cll'lli!YTELLITFORTHETRUT!t
'Ozark Storytelling' Thil documen·
ta~ t.ltplores the uniquetolk culture
of the Ozark Moun,alns, where
folklorist Kathy Nlcotspenteeveral
monthnearchingforauthentlcttle 1
tell era who apin yarns aimiltr to
tho.. of western Europe. (80
mlna.)
10:28 (]) C1N UPDAT1! NEWS
10:30 (]) IIAX IIOIIAtS

IJD II!IW~

10:111 (J)

(J) (!) •

Cll (Ja) iD) •

~~UIIANNOUIIC!D

I

TWEV!-NEWS
110M~ "NO WilE

OUTIR UIIIITI

.

\

11:28
11:30

,JriANlnl

So why am I
' Dear Ex·Sweetl!eart, I loVed you more
than
life
Itself,
but
writing to you ?
I·stlll think
you turned me down ..
o{ you often.

I'M

NOT 1

.l*IUPD"T!-1
W(!) THE TONtQHTIHOW

)&amp; t

{Answers tomorrow)
.
Yeser
I d ays

I Jumbk!s
Answer

NOTCH

TWI
" CE RA DIUM BANNER
It 's between the salesman and h is

customer - TH E COUNTER
Jumble Book No. 15; containing 110 pwzlea, is available for S1 .7S poatp1ld
from Jumble, clo ttlll newsp1pw, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648. lncludt YOIJI
n1me, address. :lp code 1ncl melle checks payable to Newsp1perbooka.

BRIDGE
Side suit shenanigans pay
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

NORTH
• A12
, A 81

When playing a trump contract with a five-card side suit
to develop, it i s usually cor-

• 8 6 13

+to s 2

r eel lactics to work on t he
sui t befor e t ou ch i ng

side

trumps.
II hearts and clubs were
gorng to brea k 3-2. it wouldn't
ma tter which suit South sta rt ed on. But to guard against
bad breaks it was essentr al for

WEST

EAST

.J8 73
"QJ97
t K QJ 7
+J

,2

•QI09!

tl09 5 2
+ Q98 3
SOUTH

•Ks .

success that South work on
clubs and leave trumps alone.
South did just that. At tr icks
two and three he played his
d
ace an king of clubs.

" K 10 6 5 3

fA

+AK 7 5 4

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

West ruffed the king and
could do nothing better than
to pla v a second diamond

West

which South ruffed . South led
a third club whic h East w on .

Nortb

Pass
Pass

E.;lst led another diamond and
South ruffed again .
Now South w as in fu !!
c ontroL He led a hea r t t o
dumm y 's ace and r eturned t o

,,1, .

East

Soltb

Pass
Pass

Pass

Opening lead :+K

~ ":.~~::,
"D'"""T..t.K•"1110
(J) a •
AIC •ws

f'miil

.

.

d1amond and ruffed it. West
overru ffed. but that was the
• defenders third and lasttnck.
South made the last three
tncks w1th the ace-krng or
spades and his fifth club.

Yestenlay 11 Alllwer
23 Take it on
31 Take off
as a couple
!4 Edited
3!Alann
Z5 Operatic
33 Put into
song
harmony
Zli Gangsters
35 - the Red
!8 Three
38 Alder tree
38 Lay odds
times

Master Hale
18 Mariner
20 Malediction
%1 Where (It.) 14 Hurl
!% Shanghai
lJ Pose 1n
staple
2t Muscular
%3 Do business
power
Zt Seraglio
%7 Pment
%1 Haul
%1 Diabolical

30 I inrear!
34 Be beside
,35 Shrelllllouae

,31 Brooklyn
camptlB

(abbr.)
Strel8and
fUm
M1be
' upcunlng
, system

t1 Fencing foU
U Taranlelll
e.g.
a Keep

guard over
4 · 15

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here'R how to work It:
AIYDLliAAXI
II LONGFELLOW
On-. letler olmply 1landl for another. In thl1 oample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slnele letter~,
apootropheo, the leneth and formation of the word• ·~ all
hints. Each day the code !ellen ue dillerent.

CIYPTOQUOTES

RX

TNIIKZ
D HI

Q H 0 ZW

HS

XH

MNKS

MNBO

NX

I MZ

RX

RI

KRSZ;
I H

ZNBD

XEZDO

I H

RI

,;.A IAIKiTBALL •

J

Z K K .
X E P B L Z H 0
Yedllda/'1 Cr)pl1qallle: THE EFFICIENT MAN IS niE

MAN WHO THINKS FOR HIMSElF AND IS CAPABLE OF
THINKINGHARDANDLONG.-MARY ANN EVANS

~;.;.;;;;.;:.;:;;.;:.:;:.;;.;;;,__-:
_--------.-.~ .

Sunshine boys
ENGLEWOOD, N.J. (AP) - "The Su111bine Soya,"
1 play bued Jllrtly on tbe llvea cf Smltllllld Dale, wu

_ _. . . . . . . . . . . . ftC

on Mr. Dale, and Sam Levene portrayed AI Lewla,
.!Jued CJIIIrlr. ~th.
II

•

4-15-81

,produced on Broldw•Y In 1m.
Jldt AlllertiOII played the role cf Wlllie Clark, bued

'l'fMii~ : ri?IC

,.,..J.,. ••

XXI J

.I

0..1t1: Dlahano C111on, Maureen
•

Mur'plly, COOmlnl.)

I'LAYOI'r-Tumoanclo11otr

•

t XXXXI

Mswel:

ZAHDHQW

Clll UPDA T1! NI!WS

11:00 (J) •

..

\SIRL FOR:.
Now arrange the ci rcled letters to
fOfl!l the surprise answer. as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

@) MOVIE -(DRAMA),.. " Thlrly
held the high trump •nd
Second• Over Tokyo" 19+$
d eclar er and dummy each
® ALLCREATURESGREATAND · ~eld a small one.
SMALL 'Char;ly Beg; As a1 Homo'
South led a fourth cl ub .
(60 m;ns.)
, West knew tha t East held the
8 130 (]) JOHN WESLEY WHITE
diamond 10, so West chucked
Ill MELISSA MANCHESTER IN his last diamond . South ruffed
CONCERT HBO presenls • d.,.
in dumm. y, led dummy 's last
lling show fea turing the pop -roc k
singer who' s captivating American
audiences with her songs.
(}) BASEBALL Atlanta Braves \IS
Houston Astros
8 :58 (]) CBN UPDATE NEWS
V:OO (l) 8 CZJ DIFF 'RENT STROKES
(]) 700CLUB
({) (j}) IIJ ALOHA PARADISE
Sydney rekindles an old love when .
her ex ·fian ce and his wife visit Par·
adise Villag e; when their attractive
partners bec ome a romantic two·
some, two entertainers try and jazz
up their plain ext eri ors ; Everett
the brave
suffers en identity crisi11 when he
attr11 cts a beaut iful woman with hill 13 Mild oath
n o n · e ~t istent wealth. (60 mins.)
15 Sea bird
D CIJ CBS WEDNESDAY NIGHT 1iGo wrong
MOVIE 'We're Fighting Ba ck ' 1981
Stars: Ke vi nMaho'l. Pau I McC rane . 17Young

•

'

I

tJ

WHAi A WOLF
INVIIED A

h)s hand with the king. West

m;ns.)

'r '' •.
''

,.I

I MO:~H'

f •

�......... r- -

Pa e-14-Tl1e Dail Sentinel

Market In Brief,-

IRS anticipates big filing· crunch By The ASBoclated Press
The ides of April may pass virlually unnoti ced for some
Americans. But for thousands of
procrastinators, today meant a
panicky race against a midnight
~eadline for mailing income tax forms and settling the annual debt to
the government.
: With filings of federal tax forms
\"IJlllling behind schedule in many
areas, according to the Internru
Revenue Service, the scramble may
l)e worse than usual. Missing the
cjeadline could mean stiff penalties
af S percent for each month the forms are overdue.
In Omaha, postal workers were
expecting such a large rush by
Nebraska taxpayers as the deadline
approached th3t they"planned to offer street service in front or the
downtown post office.
Carl Schroeder, a Postal Service
manager, said four workers would
collect returns from cars from 5
p.m. until midnight.
In Cincinnati, IRS public affairs
officer Unda Budai said: "There's
going to be a pretty heavy crunch.

.:W~-~td~n~t:Sd:a:y~~;A~p;rl;l;15;,1;9=81;.·=::;=::::.= :

Pomerov-:-Middle ort, Ohio

Our filings have been down at this
California IRS spokesman Larry
point, and we are anticipating a big Wright said the government already
55,935,890
rush."
has returned more than 20,000 unMs. Budai said major IRS offices proceSiied federal tax fo~ .to nor- , Issues Traded
1,889
in the southern half of Ohio, which them californians who forgot to sign
includes Cincinnati, Dayton and them.
Up
Columbus, would stay open two
He said about 10 percent of all for556
hours late, until 6:30p.m.
ms contain errors, most of them
Northern Ohio officials, however, forgotten signatures.
said that unlike taxpayers in other
IRS officials in Washington expect
areas, taxpayers there filed earlier about 94 million returns this year,
than normal this year.
with almost 13 million of them being
"As of April3rd in Ohio's northern mailed during the'past week.
Down
47 counties taxpayers had filed
942
2,010,000 returns compared with 1.6
Taxpayers who can't meet the
million at the same time last year," midnight deadline can get a twosaid Rollie Woods of the Cleveland month e!&lt;lension until June 15, but
•N YS E Index ,
District IRS.
their application for an extension
'
76,59- .35
must include a check for at least 90
•S &amp;P Comp.
Income-tax preparers in Kentucky percent of the estimated taxes due.
132.68- .47
What if a taxpayer has finished a
said Tuesday there was a steady in•Dow
Jones
Ind.
crease in customers seeking return but . doesn't have enough
Ap
. 989.10- 4.06
assistance in completing their for- money to pay his taxes?
IRS spokeswoman Ellen Murphy
ms. They said they expected it to get
advises the taxpayer to mail a
worse today .
MARKET IN BRIEF - This ls
"It's definitely been busier return by midnight and pay as much
the
Market lo Briel Graphic for
today," said Arlene Wilmoth, a tax as he can. She said the agency then
Tuesday,
April 14. (AP Laserconsultant in Elizabeth, Ky . " We will send a bill for the balance, inhad to call in extra help. It's been cluding interest at a 12 percent an- photo).
nual rate.
quite a rush."

Public Notic e

Public Notice
--

REQUESTS FOR
PROPOSALS
PRIVATE SECTOR
INITIATIVE
PROGRAM
BALANCE OF
STATE OF OHIO
The Offi ce ol M anpower
D evelopm e nt an d th e
Balance of Sta te Pr1va te
Indust ry Coun ci l ar e an
nounc ing an 1 ntormafi ona 1
Confer ence ro be held on
A pr i l 28 and aga1n on A pril
29. 198 1 in th e Ofh ce of

Manpowe r De ve lopm ent' s

8uil d1ng B Confe re nce
Ro om on 1160 Oubl •n Road,
~o t um_ b u s, Oh. o. M ee ting
J1rne •s ar lO ·JO r1 rn . on
both days
The purp ose at 1t11s con

tere nce 1S to dtssem •nate
Hll ormat •on on a ppl y• ng tor

CET J... f1t le V I I fundmg fo r

Federal F isc al YL&gt;a r 1982 .

f h e con fe r ence w . tt
pr ov tde in ter es ted part•es
W1th

pro g r am

a nd

pro posed inform ation
CE TA
T ill e VII
tS
d esig ned
to
1nc r ease
pr.va te sec tor employment
and tr aini ng op por tun.r ie-s

sex tS a bona t 1de oc
cupational qu ali f icati on),
ance stry . age . polit ica l at
fili ation or be lie fs or han
d1 cap 1provtded r easonabl e
accommodaTion can be
madeJ FurThermore. b1d
ders wil l tnsure that all
tr a1n1ng programs, and all
personne l ac11 0ns suct1 as
rare ol compe nsa t1 on.
bene t ll s.
transf ers,
pr'Omot1ons. layoff s or ter
minarions
are
ad
mtn1ste r ed W1lhout regard
to rac e. color . retig ton.
natrona ! or 1g1n, sex, an
ces tr y, age, po ll ltca l at
ftlta t1 0n or be fiet s or han
dtcap.
Part tC1Pai 10n Sha l l not be
l1mt tec1 on th e basis at ra ce.
color. rei 1Q1on, nattona l
or •g1n, ~ex . ances tr y. age .
poli t tca l all ll tdi 10n or
beltels, or hand tcap
F ar
ad dtl to nal
1n
lor ma110n contac t
Mr . M ark W Ut\er , P IC
Liaison
Off ice ot Ma npower
Deve lopmen t
1160 Du blin Ro ad
Columbus, Oh io 43215

1614) 466 8806

for th e econom. cally d•sad

vantaged . The geographi c

ar ea to be served 1S the 56
r.ur al coun ties known as th e
Balance of Sfafe.
Ea ch bi dder must com
pl y With all applicable
requ ir ements per t aining to
~a • r Labor Sfand ards and
Non Disc ri mi nator y Prac
ri ces of the F ederaL Sta te
and Local Govern ment
Each bidder Will 1nsure
111at em pl oyees and ap·
plicants for em pl oyment
ar e no t discrtmina t ed
aga insT beca use of r ace,
color , re l 1gion, na ti ona 1
origin , sex !ex cept where

Announcements

3

~

! 41 15, I TC

Announcements
Tra sh Ser v1ce Retract10n .
cannot pick up trash in
Syracuse area due to a con·
tr ac t
thaT
Lawrence
M anley Jr . has w1th the
villa ge . D.A (C huc k/ Me
Ph er son
1

1 PAY highest pr ices STO BAR TS Gr eenhouse 1S
possible for gold and sil ver now opened. I t rs loca ted on
coi ns, rin gs, jewelry, etc. Ra c1 ne R!. 2, C.R . 100.
Contact Ed Burkett Barber · Hanging baske ts &amp; bedd1ng
Shop, Middl epor t.
plan ts . Vegetab les &amp; plants
of a ll kinds

RACINE

GUN

II
II

Curb Inflation. II
Pay Cash for
:
Classifieds and ~~
Savell I

"

at the1 r building in Bashan . LO ST :
MALE
F acror y choke 12 guage SC HN AUZE R, answer s ro
shot guns only . Open s1ghts the name of Shultz , dar k
12 nfle .
grev, las t Sunday morning
at Rock Spri ngs in Meigs
IT' S BEELI NE' S Show and H1gh sc hool area . Rewar d
Te ll T i m e !~!! ! Our new Please call D1 ck Owen , 992
sprrng and summer li ne tS 2651 or 992 5627.
now avai lable and is it un
believable!!!! Give us a 7
Yard Sa le
ca ll lor more i nfor m ation
about th is inter esting work . YARD SALE April 15·16.
Phone 992·394 1 fr om 9·6.
Charles M cl ain r esi dence,
3 mi tes east of Ra cine on
Serv i ce , St. Rr . 124. Boa r motor ,
LOCKSMI TH
Master K eyi n g, Com bed , coff ee .table, crafT
binalions, Bonded. Call · item s, Harlequ in Romance
New Haven, W.Va. 304 ·882· books , 1969·1970 r ecords
(45). clothes, 1tems to
2079.
num erou s. to men ti on.
Time 9·5.
RACINE Gun Club has
di scont inued gun shoo ts un
3 f am il y ga r age sal e.
Tt l September .
Th ur s. 16, Fri . 17. 9 4. 488 S.
Fourth St ., Middlepor t, Oh .
S &amp; S Cera mics now open .
Located at Jack Rood
restdence, Tuppers Pl atn s, 3 fa m il y yard sale on C. R
near B ald Kno b
Ohio. Tues . &amp; Thurs. hours 31
10 a.m. 2 p.m.. 7 p.m. 10 Ce meter y. Cloth es. fur
niture&amp; m 1sc. Wed .. Thurs .
p.m.

&amp; Fr i. 843·2933.

Yard Sale : Thur sday and
Fr iday ; April 16 and 17 at
119 Butt ernu t Avenue .
Cloth es and mi sc.

WANT ·AD INFORMATION

PHONE 992-2156

Wr i Te your own ad and order by mail wi th thi s
coupon . Ca nce l your ad by Phone ..,. en you get
results . Money not refund able.

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

Name ---~------

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Pnn r one wor d 1n eac h
space below . Each in
iti at or group of figures
counts as a word . Coun t
name and address or
·phone number if used .
'You' ll ge t bett er r esults
:it you describe fu lly,
·g1ve pri ce . The Sen tinel
·re serves th e r ight to
classify. edi t or rejec t
any ad. Your ad wil l be
put i n th e pr oper
clasifi cat ion i t you ' ll
chec k the proper box
below

12.
13.

94.- - - - - - 35.- - - - - - -

15.- -- - - - 16. _ _ _ _ __

~-----------------------

case. Phone 667-3334. I

STore, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

11fl14 U-

1l- Proteu• on• l
SenttCn

J2- Mobt lt ·Hom• ~

tor S•l•
ll- F'.Irms lor 511•
l4- lutlrtlrll luild lnts
35- l.oh' Acruet

Want-Ad Advertising
Deadlines
1: JO P . M . Dlnlr

12 Noon Sllt.~rd...­
tor Mondly

B1g garage sale : in Dan·
vill e, Thursday, Fridav ,
and Saturd ay . All ki nds of
1tems Phone 742 ·30 17.

U - E ..CIYitlnt
lol-EIICtr iUI

&amp; RtfrtlfrlliOn
u - Geunl Hlutlnt
U - M .H . lhpl lr
t i- UpiiOIIItr~

Rates and Other Information

....

Ctth
I dl 't'

2cl•~·
Jll•'f•
6dl't''

I.H

UCI '

Roc.k

Springs

Pomeroy 992-2689.

Cl'llrtt

....
I ,U

J.U

'·"wtrCI "' UyUJ,

l1ch wort OYtr lht m lnlmllm tJ worfa la4 ctnta Ht
otner lllln conltKUi ivt flY I .wiiiM CPIIrtfl II fM 1.1\'

·l ~t memory , Car• of otttl" '"' Obtlnr' • unll " ' wor• . IUt
mlnimu"'. Ctt" tn N~o~uet
Mllllt HOff~ I IIIII lf141 Y.lrt Ill .. Itt I(Upltf l • · ~ WtfPI Cll" Wllfl '
orttr 1J c..,t cntrtt for 1111 c1rrvin1 l tn Nunuu •n Cttl of Tht
Stnftntl .

perieoced. 992·7314. ·
Have room and ·board and
laundry fro elderly in my

home. $250.00 per month .
992·6022.
lnsurante

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE been can·
cetled? . LOSI vour
operator's license? Phone
992-2143.
wan led to Do

-----· ·-··

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8006 D. 4 wheel drive Peutz with cab &amp; heater. 285
M.F , Farmall C. two N.H. 425 Skid Steer Loaders I
Deluxe, Trogan Industrial End Loader, gas w/ H
yd. buckel.
·
"MAC HINERY "
wesston round baler, 1.11 . 4 row Cyclone 400 corn
planter, 488 N.H. hayblne, !'f .li . Super 717 chopper, 3
pt. log splitt1er, J .D. 65 blower, Slmpliclly 2 H.P.
lillw
·
"TOOLS &amp; MISe:"
90 H.P. M&amp;W Dynomoter, duel wheel dolly, parts
bin &amp; racks, centray 97,000 BTU space healer, gas
over head heater~. gas forced air furnace, adding
machine, 3M dry copier, electric lly klllert, , _ &amp;
used large lraotor !Ires, loading ramps for garden
frat lor, 32' goose neck lrl·axle lrallor, 275 gel. fuel
' oil tank. approx . 200 bales · 9,000 rt. plasllc bater
.

"TRUCKS"
65 DOdge, Hpeed 2 spte&lt;l, 751.11 . Pickup.
OWNERS- MEIGS EQUIPMENT CO. &amp;
FULTON THOMPSON TRACTOR SALES
C•sn
. Po1tllvti.D.
Eall
Auctioneen-D•n Smith 1nd Jim Carnalllln
Apprentice, Lonftlt Noal'
"No! rospon•l~l•tor accidtnll or loss 01 property"

191.
I ACRE

on hardtop

road, 1 mile from Mid·

dleporl. All sel up tor
tr,ailer or home site.

2 STORY duplex . Close
to•schools. shopping and
pool.
2 OR 3 BEDROOM cot·
tage with 2 acres of

land, iustotf Rt . 7
Fay Mantev
Branch Mgr.
Phone 992·2l98
Real Estate

General

Oflice 742·2003
George 5. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker

NEW LISTING
Extra-Extra gOOd buy!
Approximately
71;2
ecres with J or 4

1973-Crpwn Haven, 14 x 65 ,

11'ousin!;

three ~ed i ooms , new car
pet . 19 I Camer on1 14 x 64,
two be room s, new carpet .

.
t

EAFORD[B.

VIRGIL 8 , SR ..

t •" 1011

16 E. Second Street
Phone
1-(614) -992-3325

NEW

garage and levet lol tor
only $18,500.
NEW LISTING

$44,000.00.
MAINTENANCE
FREE - Lovely ranch
bedrooms, total el ectric . Just right tor the
family on the go. Sells
for $36,500.00.
ONE ACRE l - Neat
with

L·shaped

dining·tiv ing area . 11/:z

baths. won't last long at
only S32,ooo.oo.
We now have many good
buys. Give us a call.
742-3092

Cheryl

Lemley ~

Assoc.

742·3171

Two

bedroom

9662.
Mob ile

ho m e,

bedroorr "92· i 479

thr e.e

Fur ni shed 2 bed room up·
stairs apartrytent . Adu lts
only , no pets. M iddlepor t.

992 3874.

dining, 2 patios, and
glassed·in porch. Large

14 x 60 two bedroom Holl y
Park niobile home w ith

maples for summer
comfort in Chesh ire.

central air. Phone 992 2S9B.

Sleeping rooms; by th e
w ee k .
Kitch en, and
te levi sion lounge. Carr yout
star e' and r estaurant wi th in

modern b1rch kitchen,

NEW LISTING - 4 or 5

7 ACRES -

Trailer ror sale : 3 bedroom
with o~e and one ha1f
baths, fU lly furni shed, un ·
derpinning, storm wind ows
and doors. Reason abl e. If
interest ed ca ll992 5433.

Furnished Rooms

Minerals

- - l01S~- Acrea~e

8 •acres more or less tor

with gas well .for your
own use. Smc)ll one

bedroom home, leading
creek waler and hen
hOuse. want$11 ,500.
NEW LISTING - 3
BR 's, i 11' balhs, gas

Pr ivate sleeping rooms,
wit h cooking fa ciliti es, air
condi t ioning and cable tv .

773·5651
Space l~r_R_e nt

dleport lor 516,500 .
NICE HOME - 14 yrs.
old, all on one floor, oak
floors, fireplace in !ami -

39 acr es in Bedford Town·
ship. 9r~ ·~'1 4 .

T R A 1LE R spaces tor rent
Souther n Va lley Mobi le
Home Pa rk , Cheshtre, Oh .

2 bedroom house tn countr y
for older man or woman.
949·2801 ~:o Sunday ca llS.

and 3 lots. All city

42

Mobile Homes
~or Rent
T.wOtr"a i)e~s- tOr -r €onT, fu r
nished , ,a ir condit ioni ng,

uti lities, 2 bedrooms
near shopping.

1.66 ACRES - Ideal for
house or mobile home.
Dr illed well , sept ic

Three bedroom house in

and set up. Only $6,500.

Pomeroy . 5175.00 a month ;
5100.00 deposiT. You pay
utilities. Phone 992-6384.

Housing
Head uarters

Referen Ces requ ired.

Phone 773- 5651.
Mobile home lot tor r ent.
Util ities paid . John Sheets,
3 and 1·2 miles south of

Middleport on Rl . 7.

Just in time tor Easter .
AKC r egister ed black
Labrador pups. Wormed

Call Ken Young

I

7469

required, unlimited Income
potential. Call Mr. Stacey,
1·800·4JH528.

Charm evorybody with this flu!·
ly, adorable pupp•L Fun 10 make!
Hand puppet. toy 11&lt; de&lt;oratiwe
pel-he's expens1ve to buy, costs
Ill l1ttle 'to ma~e. Use fake fur
fab11c. He's 13·tnches lon&amp; excludin&amp; his tail . Pattern 7469:
pattern pieces. d1rectlons mel.
$2.00 for each patterh. Add
101 each patttrn lor posta&amp;e
and handfin&amp;. Stod to:

.....

Nucdkcttft o.,t.

.:11 ·;

The/Daily Sentinel
.. lil, 014 CIMists Sll. ...
Yttl, l NY IOIIl. "'-! iliiit;
A4hs, ZiJ, Pslttnl IIIIa.
Catch on to tile cuh boom! Send
for our NEW 1981 NE[DI.ECRAFT
. CATAlOG. Ower 112 dai&amp;ns, 3
he pahems in~ lit. S1.00
M1 WfT lOIIlS.
lid!
Alt IIIII 1M CI':J Nil 254

...114:t:Ji;T-........•
.suo

ilU

r.tQdllle

m2:.oz:1•1 ...

II F tl' S'-1 ..11

12tllic* 'rl Ellr '-""

I~JIIIIIoaMlQIIIII
121-~
fkNI

c.-.
121..........

IIIC J I tl • " ' 117fllt .. .,., • Jill

m....-.,...
,
lui.. ., ...
114(' b - ·
I I
I

..
..._

er.ttlt

31
Homes lor Sale
I
. PRti/ATE selling, 3
bedroom home on S.R. 7'
near Memory Gardens. 211&gt;
acres. Terms. 992 7741 . . ;
Brick house on wOOded lot
Three bedrooms, large kit:
chen, family room, 'double

garage, deck. Mid· Sixties .
9'12-5420.
.
.
'

Six room farmhoose with
bath and double oarave on
one acrt and one half of
o~ound . ocated on Rl:7 at
f=1ve Points. $41,500.00.
Also an acre and one half of
oround located near tHe
fairground• . $4000.00. m ·
2571.

For sale In Mason, two
acres, lhrH bedroom, with
garage · •¥,.Jutlllly room
and ' two oearbom apartmen!. John Sheets, 3 and
ont half ml!ft south of Mid·
dleporton Rl. 7. '
·

and ShOIS. $100.00 - . 992
7285 eowen i ngs.

985-3561
ALL MAKE S
eWa ~ h e r s

tD I~ po s • ls

• Dryers
e Rdnges

•

Kuker 400 gal. spray; Int.
540, 4x16" pl ows ; M. F . 13.5'
Disc. ; fe.rt. auger; 1 set
snap on 15.5x38 dua l tires;
N H 367 Ma nure Spreder ;
Dunham 14' Harogator ;

D 1 s t1 wa s r. ~n

eH oi WaterT drtk ~

R e p a ~rtng

61 __ .'=._a_r_'! Equipment

Stnce I'ISl

·· s p ~od l ll~ l es

,... Ccun

Far "

L a umln e~

L--~·~·~·"~"~'·~·~,,~·~"·~··~--~n-~=
~

..- Apt. HoustOwner s

,... Mo bile HDme P•rks

--------- -----,
I

used R · ~O Ditch Wilch

I
I
I

. ----..---Four 15,doo gallon lank s

I

J

I

--~

I

located .3bove ground at

4 ·...;vuu l ~allan rank s
locaTed ~ove ground at

AIhens, 0 . SJ.OOO. each. I·
304·412- 27 I.

-·--------

- tj a'"y- &amp;
;;-;G::rc::a7C
in

64 · -

-

-~--~- ---~-

GOING BALD?
Can 't help )''UU

Ph. 912-2094

'

NEW LISTING - Level
lot and located on a good
· street In Syracuse. Nice
living room, equipped
kitchen, 3 be(jrooms,
and • Iorge gar age with
work area . $43,000.00.
NEW LISTING - In
Middleport. This 2 story
frame had a lot of work
done and is real cute, It

has 6 rooms, 3 bed·
rooms,

woodburning

fireplace and a small
storage bldg. $18,500.00.
AN ACRE IN TOWN And a 12X65 Holly Park
Mobile Home with cen·
Ira! air cond., some fur·
nlture.

. . . .1..

AIIDCIATES
JHn Tru11e11 Ht·2660
R....-a Dente Turner

m-sm

Ol'f'tCI tfl-:12119

··- m
·
'

•

$231.00
$250.00
$253.00
$275.00

21" 31f2 H. P. 4 Cycle Side Chute
21" 3112 H.P. 4 Cyclew/bag
21" 31!2 H. P. 4 Cycle w/bag ( elec. start)
21" 5 H.P. 4 Cycle w/bag ( H.D. comm.)

LIST

SALE

$363.00
$385.00
$467.00
$531.00

$329,95
$349.95
$429. 9~
$499.95

•
•
•
•

I

I

t

Ph. 367 7160

2·23·1mo I
'I

RIDERS

UST

$

1976 Ford E l ite; white with
brown interior, a.c., am·fm
rad io, cruise control, new
rad ial tires, low m ileage.

Good condlt;on. 992·3015.
- ..
' .....
75
~oats and
___Motqrs lor Sale
17 II. Glaotron fiberglass
cruiser wil h 100 h.p. outboard

Mercury

Insulation
Sform Doors .
Storm Window s
Replacement
Windows

1-164 H.P. w/48" Mower&amp; 48" Snow Blade
$3981.00
1;_16 H.P. w/Hydrostatic, 48" Mower 54247.00

~ SALES·&amp; SERVICE

E c onomo c a l l ~

3·11-tlc

H. L WRITESEL

Roa c hes .

Pr oc ed

REESE BUILDINGS

ROOFING

G•ragn
Porl~bl e Steel
Barns
Storage Butltllng~
EQuipment 14 ' •6', ! ' 118 ', S' • 10',
She d s
I0'1IO ', IO '• Ir &amp; up)

B i rd s,

Rodents, Spiders, Fleas,

All t ypes 01 roof work ,
new or re p ai r gutter.s
.1nd dow nspouts , gutter
c1e.l llln9 rtnd pamting .
All work guaranteed .

An y sue
buill to your
lPecil •ca !t on s. Model ~ ' "
Meigs. Galha 4 Muon Coun·

Ants and other small in·
sect con tr ol.

FREE ESTIMATES

F r cc ESf1m ates
H e.H on.l ble Prices
Ca ll Howard

lies.

1 or s year termite
guarantee
Located in Gallipolis

FliEE EHIM ATES- Al l
BUlL. DIN GS GUARA NT EEO

949· 286'2

PHONE 367-7671
or 367-7560, ,

Ph. 614·446·2801
J-27·1 mo.

949·2160

2 4 He

1" '

Rutland Fum~ure Carpet Shop
SPRING CARPET SALE

---~-----

deep

Free

COMPLETE

sever

in·

stall ation &amp; backhoe ser
vice for Ra cine·Syracuse
sewer distr ict. Dozer work

Cash ' n' Carry

if needed. 949·2293.

~ Home

stre m1 extraction .

estimated ,

reasonabt d

GRAVELY TRACTOR·

No sundav cans

ski equip enl &amp; landem 1-----------------1'--------'='-'
axle trai l r. 51 ,495. 367·
7811 .
SJ
Excavating

ra!es,

Dllcher work. Gas·Waler·
Eleelric installed. 742·2819
belore9 :00p.m.

lty

Painting .

commercial ,
exterior .

Specialjzl] In . Interior
pelnllnlt, per hanging &amp;
textured ellings. Free
Hlimatels. 7-7714 or 367·
7160.
i PlUmbing '
&amp; ~llling

WATER ,

7.99 &amp; up

.WELLS .

DOmHIIC a~ commercial,

pump sale and Hrvlct.
Tom Le · Is Drilling.
Seasonrdl ount on pum·
ps. I· ·89 ·3802 or 1·30.4·
,::~:;.:._ _ _ _ _ _. .l895 3641
:t . .

SHAG .

12.95 &amp; up
1nsta lied

$799

Sq.

Yd .

Cuh-n-Carry

Buy Now &amp; Save S2-S6 Per'Yard.
25 rolls carpet in stock to pick from .
Regular backed carpel installed free,
with pad .
·
Drive A Little - Save A Lot

BOWERS
Sweepers,

toasters, Irons, all small
appl iances. Lawn mower.
Ne~l to State Highway

2 Rolls
Rubber Back

Reg. Sll.95

1

Install ed

Electrical
Refrigeration

ELWOOD
REPAIR -

Fr om

1

DOZER work. Sma ll iobs a
specially. 742:2753.
14

CARPET
ITH PADDING

From

----------

&amp;

French

KITCHEN
CARPET

scot ·

chquard. '192-6309 or 742·
2211 .
Residential
i nter ior,

\

949-2860.

3 29 3 mo.

canvas ; al life preservers,

Imp ovements
Gene's C1rpet Cleani ng,

Pti)NE 992·2975

" BeautifUl , Custom
Buil l Garages"
Ca ll for free siding
es timate s, 949·2801 or

Hours:
Mon .· Tu es. 9·6
Wed s.· Fr i. 9-7
Sat. 9-5
Closed Thu rs .

PEST CONTROL

Fiberglasl lop with lull

81

$3299.00

BISSELl
SIDING CO.

ATHENS SPORT
CYCLES
Sti mson Ave. Athen s,

TERMITE and

motor .

sfflr"ltes

SALE

l 7 lt c.

Oua loty Buoll

priced . At er s cal l 378-6117
.or 378·6293. · ·

LIST

.LAWN &amp; GARDEN TRACTORS

V.C. YOUNG II

997 ·621 Sor 992·7314
Pomeroy , Oh.

con· ~1';~========1~========~t========~

992-3791 .

30" 8 H.P. 4 Cycle, (elec. start)
$1218.00
(Plus Free Hauling Cart $88.00 Value) ,

- Addons anc:l
r emodeling
- Root ing and gutter
work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing and
elec trica I work
( Fre e Estimates )

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

1979 : toW m ileage
mi nt
dition
with all
oprions .j Re a sonably

12 foot atuminum boat, 5
h.p. motoF- and trailer .
Motor has Jv""Jry few hours .

204 CONDOR ST.

..

$199.95
$219.95
$229.95
$249.95

SELF-PROPELLED MOWERS .

Woodourner ~

and Is In excellent condl·
tlon. Sl6,500.00.
CLOSE TO TOWN - A
small 3 room home with
a large 32~30 parage
and W• acres. Home
does need lo be.llnlshed.
119,000.00.
ONE FLOOR - Plus a
lull basemen! makes
this 9 room, 2 bath home
nice. II has 4 bedrooms,
, kitchen, dining, living,
family and T.V. room .'
Also there Is a garage
and worklhop In the
basemen!. us,ooo.oo.
WE HAVE OVER 10
I'ROPE RTI ES
TO
CHOOSE FROM. STOP
IY AND LIT U5 SHOW
THEM TO YOU .
RIAL TOR
H111ry a. Cltttnd, Jr.

SALE

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

Vinyl&amp;
Aluminum Siding

F toor model combination
record p layer and ra dio.

LIST

10 7 tic

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION

Household
. Goods
'

992· 5682

Ga s Ltne·D•tch es
Lme Hook-ups
Septi c Tan ks
county Certtfi ed
Roush Lan e
Chesh1r e. Oh .

--------------'

Hr s.: Mon .-Fri.

9 A.M.·5:30 P.M.

w r~ter

I
I

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

- Auto and Truck
Repair
- Transmission
Repair

wa ter·Sewe r-E l ~ c t nc

I

TIRES GOING BALD?

- Merebandlse
Sl

I
I
I

Weh a~c F 1re~ton&lt; 72 hand"''(
. canhelp.

Oh .

REESE ~
TRENCHING
SERVICE

I

- ..

-~

51.,

Truck Repa1r
• Rebuilt Autom at1c
Transm iss ton s
on
most Am erica n Model
Cars.
•S22S.OO Pa rts &amp; Labor
Plus Fluid .
• 24 Hour Wreck er
Service
•Tnple A Afftliated.
4·6 1 mo.

PAR TS ANO SERV ICE

Cor~tte;

m~--

1111 I I~
1141 I I ......
IQ.IIQIIIIIIIW!r

JlO~Ih

f orfil si S!! rVI Cil

535 .00992 3079.

19" 3 H. P. 2 Cycle Side Chute
19" 3 H.P. 2 Cycle w/bag
21" 3112 H.P. 4 Cycle Side Chute
21" 3112 H. P. 4 Cycle w/bag

Le t George Miller check
your present electrica l
system .
Res idential
&amp; Commerc•a l

C&amp;AAUTO REPAIR ROGER HYSELl'S
RaCtf1 e,
GARAGE
PH . 949·2777
• Complete Auto and

APPLIANCE SERVICE

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

Investment

For all of your wiring needs .

HJ 50"-20-JO 'H.P .
60"-25'60 H.P .
60"-45-80 H.P.

UK C regi stered. 949·2657.
Mon.·Sal . alter 5 p.m.

Hay lor S~le . .15 a bale. 843·
2933 or 84l4831.

21

available,

MILlER ELECTRIC
SERVICE

ARD

Interior and exterior pa in·

Bu1ineu
Opportunity
LOG HOMES, faclory
dire ct,
dealership

J24·1 mo.

6 15 tt c

Alhens. Ohio. 53.000.00
ea ch. Phohe 1 304·4222781.

camps 1tes for r en t on
scenic river ban k. Util ities
pa id. Small trai ler s only .

cabl e tv . 773·5651.

. tank, and electric are
there . Ready to move on

Racine, Oh .

Trencher 1·614·694· 7842 .

992·39S4.

1- - '
4~ ____Hpu se~ !o r Rent

tv room and one in the
full basement , Garage

Pomeroy . La r ge lot s. Call

992-7479.

Rentals

Rl. 3. Box 54

1 wa lker male, 5 years old
(n1te c;hampion ,; 1 walker
female, 4 years old ; 1
walker m ale pup. All ar e

COU NTR Y MOB IL E Home Int . trac lo•. 986. 304675·
Park , Route 33, North of 224S.

sale SII.OOO. 9?21292.
.

heat, city utilities, 2 por·
c hes ·&amp; leve l lot in Mid·

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Pomeroy

500 teet. 992-6370.

46
3S

Size.s from 4x6 to 12x40

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

45

bedrooms. 2 full baths,

Utility Buildings

Pets tor Sale

56

furnish ed

New Homes - extensive remodeling ·
• Electrical work
• Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph . 992 -7583

992·2181

E . Main St .

aparl men1 992 5434 or I
304-882·2566.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

SMALL

~LANDMARK
-

Apartmen1
for Ren1

3·16·1 mo.

Ph. 61,, ·843-2591

1749

Syracusr. Sli,OOO. 992·5065
or 992 · 5~86 .

shrubbery and garage
near shopping .

water .

Kanauga Mobile Home
Sa les; Kanauga, Ohio. 446·.

10'x.48' trail er wiTh 2 added
room s 112' x42 ' on lot in

Beautifu I r i ver front
location . 4 nice size

sundeck overlooking
your own pond. Ex:tra
trailer hook ·up for addi ·
tional i ncome. Only

and

.

MOBILE HOM E lor rent.

44

Osborn Rd.

Reedsville, Oh .

Sizes
" From lOxJO "

PH . 992·2882
992·2606
992-7861
3·11 I mo pd

Compl et el y
furni shed .
Adults preferred. Depos it.
992

ANN'S CAKE
DECORATING
SUPPLIES

Fa1m Buildings

"Specializing In
Re-Roofing"

Trai ler Court, M inersvi ll e.

992- 3324

1980 odx14, 4 bedroom
$1 ,500. pit; 1975 Holl ypark Two bedr oom apartment ,
70xl4 , 2 bedroom ; 1970 Kit fur-n ished, ut il ities paid .
24x60, 3 bedroom ; 1979 Also two bedroom mobile
Elcona, 70x14, 3 bedroom ; home, one child accepted .
1979 Bristol 70xl4, 2 John Sheets, 3 and one half
bedroorjl; 1977 Sherwood miles south of 'Middleport
Park , (0&lt;14, 3 bedroom . on Rt . 7.

bedroom frame home
w ith bath , large k itchen, ·
lots of varnished wood
cabinets. Natural gas
F .A. rurnace, porch,

ROOFING
• Small Carpenter Jobs
Darrell Brewer

2 bedroom Mobile Home.
Ad ults only . Brown's

PM C,

_

wood cabinets In kit
chen, lull basement,
sl iding glass door to
front porch and nice lot.
Only $37,500.
REAL BUY - 2 ~ 3

central air. All large
rooms except one. 5.gas
firepla ces, flowers,

elec1ric

1970

12 x 60, ftw o bedrooms, new
carpet. ,B x S Sales, tnc .,
2nd x ~iand Street, Point
Pt easa~l. wv Phone 675

--·· _._

Modern 3 or 4 bedroom
home, beth, natural gas
F .A. furnace. Natural'

Home is only 2 yrs. old
and has equ ipped kil·
chen . Nice redwood

$45,000.00!!
NEW LISTING - Ap·
prox. 20 acres wilh 5
bedroom tarm home. 2
full baths. Barn with

carp el .

new carpet. 1976
12 x 60, two
all electrrc . 1971
12sx 6 ), rwo
bath &amp; 11J, new

4424.

LISTING

basement with oarage.

home. Full

1972 Ch~mpion , 12 x 60, two

bedrooms,
Cameron,
bedrooms,
Skyline,
bedrooms,

$88

· -~--

Real Estate- General

bedroom family brick
home. Ph baths, new
gas F.A. furnace and

bedroom

- --··-

DECORATING
SUPPLIES

ALL STEEL

ling wanted. No iob to
small. 949·2379.

to

I p.m. call 992·

building site or trailer

total electric, 3 bedroom

mow grass on Mulberrv
All~ r

__ __ _

·-- -·,
Mobile Homes
for Rent

42

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

----

4-15·1mo.

20 INCH
PUSH
MOWER
00

AU CAKE

Elfecti ve 4-6-81
MON. thru SAT.
9 to·s
Closed Thursday
4·9·1 mo. pd.

PH. 992-7201

AT POMEROY
LANDMARK

20 o/.-.3D% OFF!

NEW SIDRE

eWater, Sewer &amp; Gas
Lines
• Dump Truck
Licensed &amp; Bonded

$125. 992·2775.

SALE

322 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

• Septic Systems

4x8 util ity trailer . Inc losed .

w ith low heating bills .

-BAILErS SHOES

• Backhoe
• Excavating

Baby bed &amp;u maltress.
Exc. cond. $35. 992·2775.

Headquarters

,

4 ACRES of vacanlland
on hardtop road. Idea l

guaranteed. M. Meier. 992·
5983.

us right away and gel on
the eligi bil ity list at 992·
2156 or 992·2157 .

FRIDAY, APR!L 17, 1980
10:00 A.M.

twine &amp; other misc..

Will care tor elderly In oor

home. Man, woman, 1 or
couple. Trained anp ex-

ALTERATIONS &amp; general
sewing, experienced, work

and earn good
some great gifts as a
tinel route carrier . Phone

Ave .
3367.

General

Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.

992-6370.

Someone

need of work. J x.
p e ri en ce d
skidder
operator ,
bulldozer
operator and truck driver .

Will do all tye s of car·
penler work . Experienced
and responsible. No job lo
big or to sma ll. Phone 992·
3941anyllme,

to small . Will buy one piece·

WANTED :

Chester

Township on Rt . 248. sma ll
house &amp; barn. 667·6129 or
. 985·4146.

home

or complete households .
Martin's Genera l Store at

ct1ains. diamonds, silver
money and coi ns. Marti n's
Genera l Stor e, M iddleport .

In

5858.

New. used, and antique fUr·
nifure. No item to large or

and

farm ,

HOBSTETTER REALTY

work, plumbing, mobile
~ome or residence. 992·

Beec h Stree t, Middleporl.
April 16, 17, and 18th. 9·5. Wrile : M.D. Miller, Rt . 4,
Furnitur e, clothes . and lots
of m isc. items. Phone 992 Pomeroy, OH 45769. Or
call992·7760.
7339 .

gold

tile, siding . 992·2759.

Furnace repairs, electrical

Old furniture. desks, gold
rings , jewelry, sil ver
dollars, sterling, etc. wood
ice boxes, ja rs, antiques.
etc . cornplete households.

9 _ .I'V~'!!ed lo_Byy
WANTED TO BUY :
SILVER .
GOLD ,
PLATINUM, STERLI NG
COI NS , RINGS ;JE WELR ·
Y, MI SC. ITEMS. AB·
SOL UTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARAN TE D. ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP , MIDDLEPORT ,
OHI0992·3476.

paneling , ceiling, or floor

11

1RON AND BRASS BEDS ·

Five
family
carport
sa le: Ra 1n_ or· shine, 324

100 acre

-· -·-·

home on nice sfze lot. 3

Rd .1

have gone out of buslneu .
" TRACTORS"

11- Homtlm,rortm•nll
&amp;J- Piumblnt&amp; E•Civlllnt

I I Word• or Under

Co.~

Equip. I.H. and Fullon Thompson Tractor Sales,
who have combined eqwipment to sell because lhey

I SERVICES

H- Rullor•

end. Sl2.50 per ion . Bundled
slab . SI0.50 per lon .
Oelivered 10 Ohio Pallet

Located on lrd Street in Pomeroy, Ohio at Meigs

'"Pol"

Jt- 111!11 ESIIIt W'lnl•d

,Raccoon Puppet!

on largest

PUBLIC AUCTION

Truck• klr hie
L. Ivtslock
HI'fl &amp; Gnin
Sttd I Ferfillltr

,, _ Atlto, tor S. le
ll- VInl &amp;4 W.O.
14- MottrC'fiCits
H· ·
1Aulo Pull
&amp; Accenonu
H - Auto

1 REAL ESTATE

diameter 14"

REPAIR or remodeling
work, floors, doors, wall

13

CHIP WOOD. Poles max .

dlepon

8

1 TRANSPORTATION

JI - Homn lorS• t'l

stamped, IOK ; 14K, or IDK
gold . Si lver coi ns. pocket
walches . Call Joe Clark at
992·2054 al Clark 's Jewelry

Yard Sale : Thu rsdaY and
Friday fro m 9·5 on 927
Brown ell Avenue, 1 Mi d·

tt- Firm £qutpment
n - wutecllo I!J y

l'luuneu
Opporlunily

AU rt.'"nint
rill.

Mail This coupon with Remittance
TheDa ily sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Ohio ~5769

Wanted to Buy : class rings,
wedding bands, anythi ng r

------

1 FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LII/ESTOCK

1 FINANCIAL

'-----------i

Yard Sa le: across from
Clines Fruit Farm on old
Rt 7. Thurs day , Fri day ,
Satur day .· Furnf.ure,
clothing , dr apes, antiques,
toys, gun trap andl gun

992-6370.

!1- Pel' lor Slit

11- W.Inted To Do

' --·-·- - - - - -

~

bands, diamonds . Gold or
si lver . Ca ll J . A. Wamsley ,
Treasure Chest Coin Shop;

SJ- Anlt(III U
~4 - Mn c Mtrchlnd tu
51- l utldtn!l Suppli n

lhd10, TV

32 . --~----

'' · ---~--

-------.
_y.~an led to B~ _ ..

Yard Sale

7

some

&amp;

wages. 992·7226.

silver, ol d pocket watches.

21- Moner lo L.o.rt

33._ _ _ _ _ __

Room , ' poard

12 Situations Wanted
WOMAN Seeking em ·
ployment, Hospital, Dr. of·
tice ot Clinic as recep·
tionist or Medical records.
Any shirt or days. Know
medical
termln9logy .
Refe rences. 742·2030.

Call992-5776 or '192·3288. /

WANTED house&lt;eeper lo
help with elderly woman
crippled by arthrills .

SI - Houuholel GOOd I

11-

10.
11 .

ween 3:30-7:00p.m.

11
Help wa, n,_te,d,___
OL D CO l NS, pocket wat- GET VALUABLE training
ches, cl ass rings, wedding as a young business oe1rson

n - cB. TV . Rldio EqiJipmenl

&amp; C8 Rt p&lt;ltr

31. _ _ _ _ _ __

Waitress wanted . Apply in
person
Steamboa t
Restauran t, Raci ne. Bet·

Now . bu yi ng

16-

9.

month it you quality . Call
992-7440 between 2 p.m. and
6p.m.
·

I MERCHANDISE

IJ- Silulltd W.ln ltel
l l - ln1ur•nce
14 - Businus Trltnmg
IS..:s cr.ootl lntlruci •On

2'1 · -----~30.
_ _ _ _ __

If you have sold insurance,
Sll(eepers, fuller brush , etc.
We can guarantee S1000 per

Alhens, OH. 594-4221 .

1, _ Help w.,mea

7.
8.

2354 or 742·2755.

• RENTALS

I EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

17. _ _ _ _ _ __
18. _ _ _ _ __
19. _ _ _ _ _ __
20. _ _ _ _ __
21. _ _ _ _ _ __
22. _ _ _ _ __
I.
23. _ _ _ _ _ __
2.
24. _ _ _ _ _ __
3. - - - - - - - . 25. _ _ _ _ _ __
•.
26. _ _ _ _ _ __
5.
27. _ _ _ _ _ __
6.
28. _ _ _ _ _ __

Avon
Work your own
hours. Part·t1me or tull
lim. If ,interesled call 742·

41 - Houltl lor Rent
41 - M.Obllt Momu
tor Rent
••- Ap•rlmtnllor R11m1
45- FAoom•
•. -sp•ce tor It en1
47- Winttd lo Aen r
41- E qutpment tor ••nt

9- Wanledto Buy

For Sale
Announcemen t
For Rent

WANTED. People to ' sell

I- Card of lh~nlt s
2- ln Meman~m
l - Announcements

7- 'fuclhle
1- PIJbhc S•le
&amp; Auchon

wanted

AI!OUT?

IANNOUNC.EMENTS
4- GtY .. WiiY
1- H•PPY Ads
6- Lasl • nd F"ountl

These cash rate s
include discount

10~1M

HelpWanled
Woman to stay Wilh elderly
woman that has arthritis.
Board and some pay . 992·
7226.

ton, exc. cond. 5275. 3677811 .

32
-·

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

Load Star electri c hoist, 1

PH. 985·4197
Homes for Saii - - ·

614·

--MiSC. Mei-chiRise
-----

54

Virginia Hayman- Associate

31

can

coin collections.

76iJ167 or S57·3411 .

Priced in the low 30's.
REEDSI/ILLE 1/ILLAGE - l'lo slory 3 BR,
remodeled kitchen, with loads of cabinets. Large lot
with garden space. $31,500.
CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
Nancy Jasepers- Associate
PH. 843-2075

DILLON
REAL ESTATE

11

PLY : Circle Sales, P.O.
Box 224-D, Richmond Hill ,
NY 11418.

every Sa t. night 6:30p.m.

' ' h-----------~------------,'

l

CC!IIF'AH'IOO '1011 ~­
SEHT? ""'"'ro '!011
!WIT TO TAu&lt;

g~rage,

·Business Services

Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket walches and

$65,000.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Well kepi 3 B.R. ranch on
large lot. Features wood burner in brick setting,

Real Estate

ma 11ing work . No e)! ·
perience "e quir~d . AP·

Rac1ne Gu n Club. eve ry
Lost and Found
Friday night start1n g at 6
7:30 p.m . Fac tor y choke Lost Smal l female beeg le
guns only
in For es t Run area.
Wearing gree n n ylon
Ra cine Volunteer F i r e COIIM a ll 992 2067 or 992·
Department sponsors a 3011 or Don Gru eser .
shot gun &amp; rifle match Reward .

Cle l an d
Greenho u se ,
Geraldine Cleland , Rac1 ne,
Oh io Vegta ble plants, bed
ding plants. poTted plan ts,
and hangi ng baskets.

.

Sl85.00 to S500 weekly doing

M&lt;OS CAU-1110? _,.

ANAU)UAINTANCE ·••
IllS I'IIWI BIYiiS i&gt;tl/1 7HE
7HIRP~EE · .. .
(ALL

SHOOT,

I ~.=..-... --------------------;

In 191Ml, the court agreed that part
of Oregon's claim should be reimbursed. But the court said the state's
demands for repayment of bounties
and extra wages uSed to entiCe men
to teplace U.S. soldiers should nOt be
.borne by the federal gdvenunent.
No payment was ever .made for
any of· the claim, Edwards said.
Congress never p88Bed· an appropriation bill
authoirizing
payment.

ii -=-_Heffi Wanted

A~ri'i~iq~u-e~s=:=T.;:======~==========~=:==~

s}

pay cash or certified check
for ant iqyes and collec: ·.
tib les or entlre estates.

burner alone, but t1as alternate system . Lovely for
country ·· close to town living. Has fenced in area for
farm animals, above ground swimming pool , and
new fruit trees. Owner may help fi nance . Priced at

carpet, oak trim,

State hiBtorian Cecil Edwards said
Oregon ran up the biD when it
1
mustered local residenta to man
garrisons against Indian attacks after federal troops pull~ out to help
fight the Confederacy.
Democratic Sen. E.'D. Potts said
the money plus interest comes to ·
about $45 million, but the state is
willing to settle for $1.3 millfo~,
. today's equivalent of ita expenses
during the Civil War.

They'll Do It Every Time

Anno,Jncements

by Larty Wrtght

HO:ME IN RACINE, OH. ~ Well kept,
eco.nornv. llll·out · easy clean
of ving space.' Call and
let us shOw
Asking $57,500.
TWO NEW
Both asking $21 ,500. Tup·
pers Plains area , country homes.
OWNERS LEAI/lNG AREA - 3 BR brick home
close to New RavensWOQd Bridge &amp; Kaiser Plant.
This home Is clean, has F.P. and much of the fur·
nllure and appliances can be negotiated . 10% mar·
tgage can be assumed, Asking 539,900.
CHESTER AREA - I mile off Rt. 7. 3 B'R home,
eal·ln kitchen, formal DR, extra spacious LR tor
famly living, entertaining·. Home heated by wood·

~ state's efforts tQ make the
federal ' governllient ·pay · seemed ·
headed for success at the tum of the
century, when !hi! case .'went to the
U.S. Court of Claims. A headline in
the Morning Oregoitlan of June 30,
1906, stated: "Oregon Claims Soon
To Be Paid."

The state Senate voted
unanimously TUesday for a meljsUNt
urging Congress to reimburse
Oregon for ''substanlial elpel18e8 incurred in furnishing ' troops and
aiding the United States in maint
taining the common defense of the ·
Oregon Trail, miners and settlers in
the Civil War peri!ld."
·

lm;'ge returns, Sentinel Want Ads
J

CARLYLE 1"

Kit

TheDa

liM ·
ATTENTION :
PORTANT TO YOU ) Will

. Oregon replaced ·tlw· wtthdra"'"
federal troops during ~ Clvtl War,
with about 1,1Dl men, Including one
regiment of infantry, one regiment
of cavalry and a detaclunent of infantry.

SAlEM, Ore. (AP) - 1be slate of
Oregon, figuring that 100 years is
enough of a grace period, is dunning
the United States for payment of
Civil War claims totaling· $1.3
.million. ·

.

investment~

--•-

Oregon sues United State,s

N YSE Issue s
Consolidated Tradong
Tuesday . Ap111 14
Volume Shares

.

Small

-r---~--------------_!~~~~l~d~d~~~

~,..

RUTLAND FURNITURE

Main St.

742-2211

==========1f=====;::===::

Garage on Route 7, Y85· 1
3825.
1Available to handle all yoor
elec&amp;~cal "'leeds. · Repairs,
wlr!Wg ,

re·wiring,

in·

14

Electrical
&amp;

_
MACHINE

Refrigerallo~

SEWING

8l
Generol Haulln
Well's Trash Hauling . ss.oo:
per

month .

Olive

and '

oranoe Townships and,
revisions,
residential, . makes! 992·2284 . The surrounding areas. 985-.
form , business. No lob to Fabric Shop, Pomeroy . 3518.
large or to small. Available Authorized Singer Sales
tmmldlllely . Bill Cadle at and Serv ice. we sharpen
9'12-7182.
Scissors.
slallotlon,

modifications,

Repairs,

serv ice,

all

---- - -WANT AD

�Page-16

The Daily sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, Apt111S,1981

IMeigs County happenings I No progress made to end coal ·strike
Correction

To end marriages
..

Christy Caldwell was granted a
one year teaching contract in the
Southern Local School District Mondliy nigh) rather than Christy Powell
as reported earlier.

Two divorces both charging gross
neglect of duty and extreme cruelty
have been granted in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court: Sara
M. Seyler, Middleport, was granted
a divorce from Richard D. Seyler II,
Pomeroy, and Dennis Satterfield,
MinersviUe Route I, from Robin
Denise Satterfield, Syracuse.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted--Tony Stephen ,
Pomeroy; Patricia Cleland,
Langsville; Chad Pope, Middleport ;
Richard Rathburn, Middleport.
Discharged--Jackie Brannon,
Lone Tisdale, Judith Crow, Richard
DeMoss, Odell Blake, Callie
Metheny, Paul Schuler and Chad
Pope.

Plan potluck dinner
Hemlock Grange will hold a
potluck dinner at 6 p.m. Friday at
the hall.

Couples will wed
: Randy E. Houdashelt, 21,
P.omeroy, and Teresa Lynn VanMeter, 21, Rutland.
ponald Eugene Casto, 23, Minersville, and Traci Denise Weese, 21,
Cheshire.

Probe minor wrecks
Two trucks received moderate
damages as the result of a hit-skip
accident on the upper parking lot in
Pomeroy Tuesday.
Pomeroy Police said a car hit a
truck owned by James Bailey and
the Bailey truck was shoved into a
second truck. Police said that an
arrest is expected.
Police also reported that several
arrests are expected as the result of
a front window being shot out of the
Elberfeld Department Store late
Monday night.lnvestigation of the
incident is continuing.

:Commissioners
iContinued from page I 1
about $12,000 additional funds added
to his ,budget for the current year.
During the discussion , Commissioner Henry Wells said-he has
mentioned several times about putting a ,tax levy on the ballot in order
to provide moneys for higher
salaries for deputies.
Sheriff Proffitt stated that this
would not keep his deputies from
walking out because they need financial help now.

WASHINGTON (AP) ..:.. Efforta to
end the 21Mlay coal strike are
stalled, with negotiators for the
nation's soft~oal industry and the
United Mine Worllers trading
charges on who is to blame for the
latest deadlock.
Union and industry bargainers
met for about five hours Tuesday,
but ended the talks with both sides
reporting no progress. UMW
President Sam Church said the
union had made proposals but said

faced wanton endangerment
charges on warrants blken out by
Bates, pollee said.
,
Tuesday's session was the first at- ·
tempt to tesolve the cllspute that
sent some 160,000 coal miners to the
picket lines on March 'tl.
Officials had predicted the strike
would be . a short one, since
negotiators agreed upon a threeyear contract calling for a 36 percent
increase in wages and benefits. But
miners voted down the pact by a 2-

u~ttmg e m&lt;iH I

·--TO
BUSI=rDUSTRY,
AND THE . · SSIONS

·

BANK ONE OF POMEROY. NA

614/992·2133

ELBER.FELDS

Arm Rugs

School area.

enttne
1Section , 14 Page~
lS Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, April16, 1981

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
President pardons officials
WASIDNGTON - One of two fonner FBI officials pardoned by
President Reagan for authorizing illegal break-ins during·a probe ·of
anti-war radicals in the early 1970s. says he owes one to the Gipper.
And, he says, so does the entire U.S. intelligence corrununlty.
.
Reagan announced unconditional pardons Wednesday for W. Mark
Felt, 67, once the FBI's No. 2 official, and Edward S. Miller, 57,
onetime head of th.e bureau's intelligence division. Both men said they
felt vindicated.

Child addict didn 't exist
WASIDNGTON - The Washington Post, calling itself "the victim of
a hoax," publicly apologized today for printing a fabricated story
about an 8-year-old heroin addict that won a Pulitzer Prize, journalism's highest honor.
Reporter Janet Cooke relinquished her $1,000 Pulitzer Prize for
featur~ writing and resigned from the newspaper Wednesday after admitting to her editors that her story was acomposite and the child ad·
dict she described and quoted did nor exist.
.

Crews continue rescue effort

Monroe Radial-Matic®and
Monro-Magnunr&amp;O ·
Shock Ahsorliers on sale.

JU!;DSTONE, Colo. - Rescue crews inched their way along a 7,:roo
foot sloping mine shaft early today, trying to reach IS miners trapped
by an exploSion that swept through the lower limits of the Dutch Creek
No. 1coal mine on Colorado's Western Slope.
Seven men came out of the mine in two groups after the blast Wednesday afternoon. Four were uninjured, but three were admitted to
Valley View Hospital in Glenwood Springs for treatment of burns,
bruises and shock, officials said.
·

~

&lt;1

Winni14g Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The winning number selected Wednesday night in
the Ohio Ulttery's daily game "The Number" was 691.
The lottery reported earnings of $771,593 from the money wagered
on the drawing. Lottery officials said sales were $989,164.50. Holders of
wiru1ing tickets are entitled to share $217,571 .50.

Adeal you can't top. Buy one, get the second haU price.
Come In and lake advantage of
!his great oiler. Buy one Monroe
Radial- Malic~ Shock Absorber.
our lop-of-lhe·line car shock ...
or one Monro-Magnum• 60
Shock Absorber. our top

llghllruck shocl:. cmd gel.lhe
second one h?ll .AI. That's a 50 ·
percent savings on the second
shock. But hurry. Oiler good lor a
limited lime only

Weather
Cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstonns tonight and
Friday. Lows tonight around 50. High! Friday 7().75. Chance of rain 50
percent tonight and 60 percent Friday. Winds southerly to southwesterly around 10 mph tonight.
Extended Ohio Forecut- Saturday through Monday: Chance of
silowers and thWJderstonns each day. Highs in the mid to upper 60s
north to mid to upper 70s sOuth. Lows in the 50s Saturday and in the
mid-40s north to mid-liels south Sunday and Monday.

POMEROY HOME &amp;AUTO

Amtrru send s lo~ e ··

Pomeroy , On.

Ph . "1·10Jtor ••1 ·511r

Please phone 992-2651 or 992-5627

•

at y

Vol.30, No.1
1
Copyri,hled 1981

their incomes, the report said.
Reagan's statement took note of
other alternative tax proposals now
before the Congress but said that
"compared to our proposals, they
will result in higher taxes for the
American people."
Reagan is proposing a three-year
cut in income tax rates of 30 percent.
Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, O.IU.,
chairman of the tax-writing House
Ways and Means Committee,
recommended a one-year tax cut
that would not be as costly as the
president's plan.

YOU'Ll FIND YOUR CORRECT SiZE, TOOl

IN Buntrn"' llvt .

REWARD

•

$5.3 · billion in cuts by the administration. The budget office said
it was unable to estimate the effect
of $10.1 billion in proposed cuts in
Medicaid, Social Security and other
programs.
The 20 million to 24 million people
are 51 percent of an estimated 16.5
million families with incomes below
ISO percent of the goverrunent's official poverty line, $6,570 for a
famlly of three and $8,410 for a
famlly of four. Most would lose only
a little, but 4 percent of the total
would lose as much as 16 percent of

'

POMEROY
R.OWER SHOP
~Nat

when he delivers his first broadcast position in the Democraticmesaage sin~ the assassination at- controlled House.
tempt.
'
The Washington Post reported
A radio or television broadcast is todily that a new study by the
possible, perhaps as early as the end Congressional Budget Office
of neXt week, the aides say. Another estimates the president's proposed
possibility is a nationally televised budget cuts in four programs alone
appeal for his economic program on . would mean less after-tax income
April 'tl, a·date that would coincide for 20 million to 24 million people.
with the end of a twl)oweek would says In a report comcongressional recess.
missioned by two prominent opReagan's written statement Wed- ponents of the president
nesday appeared designed to prod
Those four programs - welfare,
Congress into approving his tax cut school lunches, public service jobs
plan, which lu!s run into stronR OJ&gt;" and food stamps - are targeted for

COLORS. JUST THE FINISHING TOUCH FOR YOUR LIVING
ROOM, BEDROOM, PLAYROOM, KITCHEN; DEN.

Permanent Memorial Flowers

·· r11t

more )ln!dlctable and painful tax increase," he said.
·.The one-page statemelt was
iBilued BB Reagan continued his
recuperation in the White House
living quarters from a bullet woWJd
inflicted tn an assassination attempt
March 30.
Other adminlstratioo officials,
primarily Vice President 'George
Bush, have been substituting for
Reagan at appearances he might or~rily be making to pitch for his
eConomic program.
Aides say Reagan almost .certainiy will focus on his program

STOP .IN AND SEE THE NEW DESIGNS I"" DECOlA 1'01

Cut Flower Arrangements

Lost Sunday morning at Rock Springs in the Meigs High

WASHI~GTON (AP) - President
Reagan, lieginning to re-emerge 8a
chief fighier fOr his economic
program, insists that congressional
alternatives to his embattled threeyear tax cut plan ''are not the answer, they are the problem."
·
"Taxes are much too high to deal .
in half-measures," a convalescing
president said in a written statemelt
issued Wedmisday, the deadline for
filing personal income tax returns.
" I ask aU AIDericans io join me in
changing our tax syStem so that next
Aprill5 we shall begin to celebrate
tax reductions instead of simply one

HOME FURNISHINGS DEPT. 1ST FLOOR

LILIES- MUMS
AZALEAS - CORSAGES

MALE SCHNAUZER, answers to name of Shultz,
dark grey.

AlternatiVes not answer-·Reagan

e

~mar l

LOST

'

NEW SHIPMENT

prosecutor answering in ' the
negative.
Later Tuesday evening, a
delegation of members from various
work unions in the county met with
the board and asked to have the
situation of the striking deputies explain and requested that the board of
commissioners ratify the contract.
Commissioners spoke on the financial condition of the county and
stated that the board could not a]}propriate additional funds to the
sheriff's department because the
Commissioner David Koblentz total amount certified by the county
aske d Sheri ff Prof£itt the budget commission at the beginning
possibilities of laying off two people of the year had been appropriated.
so that salaries of the others could be
Commissioners, however, did tell
increased. Sheriff Proffitt replied the group that they will continued to
that he does not have enough men study the matter and apparently
now and could not lay anyone off.
were to reexamine the situation ,--- - - - - - - - - ---1
Koblentz also asked it if could be today with the county's budget comclarified as to whom the employes mission.
Make Sume J;unny llappy.
are striking against. Prosecutor
' At Tuesday's meeting, the
Crow said that legally the strike was negotiating team wo on the strike by
against the sheriff but the employes county highway department
are saying they are striking against workers reported that no movement
the commissioners.
has been reported and that it is the
The sheriff said he has gone as far intention of the team to stand firm
as he can and it is now the problem on its last offer.
of the commissioners and citizens of
County Engineer Philip Roberta
the county. He further stated that if O:Oet w1th the board to discussion
the board does not come up with the drainage problems on Middleport
money, then the consequences must Hill and he will look further into
be faced.
possible solutions of thooe problems.
Give F rowers for Easter, April19
Commissioner Jones said it is his
Wednesday, May 6, was declared
understanding that if the contract 1'1ursing Home Residents Day and
11 1 u h~K~u l o!~l ...,u ~ 10 1preu rl •omr t u• l~!l 10 '
lio lodu,
o•
11
agreement the sheriff signed ex- Betty Hobstetter, clerk of the Meigs
•, 011 ;, g 1ev&lt;&gt; p lu" ' w., run dol l • ~" ' l ln~ Nh lfll! '"
ceeds the sheriff's appropriations, it county Court, was granted per'~ '' 0 ,.10 01 ulmo1 1 un ywher co "' rh01 .. ()ri. l )o &lt;ull
0' &lt;O'"" tJ r , 00 n A.nd be u
bunny
would be considered an illegal con- mission to attend a meeting of the
tract. He asked Prosecutor Crow if Ohio Association of Municipal Court
Spring Blossoms
he would advise the board to ratify Clerks to be held in Columbus, May
For Someone You Lave
an illegal contract with the 11-13.
ltt~rl •h l)n"l

--~,..

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we
them.""rejected everything
the gave
industry
B.R. Brown, chief negotiator for
!he Bitumin&lt;lUS Coal Operators
Association, refused to diacuss the
substance of the talks. In a formal
statement iBBued later, however, the
industry group complained the union
had attempted to reopen several
issues that Previously had been
agreed upon.
"The BCOA flatly rejected the
union's position, which continues to
renect a serious lack of bargaining ·
discipline on the union's part," the
association said.
· Talks are scheduled to resume
Friday, and the UMW's Church
said: "We will 'give them a revised
package ... and go frol!l there." 1
There was no inunediate word on
what changes the union would make.
Meanwhile, there were new reports of violence in the coaHields.
In Kentucky, authorities said
Tuesday that a UMW official was
shot when coal trucks crossing
picket lines were pelted with rocks
at a non-union mine, Officials said
Billy Gene Looney, 34, of ('layking,
Ky., a representative from the UMW
District 30 · headquarters, was
treated at a hospital for a bullet
wound in the thigh and released.
Police said the incident was
triggered Monday when pickets
threw rocks at a truck driven by
Bobby C. Bates, 40, of Whitesburg.
"The driver apparently shot out cl
the vehicle," said stale policeman
Ronnie Wardrip.
Bates was charged with firstdegree assault and first-degree wanton endangennent, while Looney
and Jerry Puckett of Jenkins, both
of whom were on the picket line, also

~eno l

..,BANK ONE . . --..,.

'

606 e. Main
Ph. 992-2094
Pomeroy, Ohio
Front End Alignment-512.50 Most Passenger Cars

we •cept •II m• 1or crH1f urd•,
1nd wt w •re
!low ers
•~ervw nt rt

EYECATCHER- The home of Mr. and Mrs. FrankUn Rizer, E.
Mala SL, Pomeroy, Is probably the most extensively decorated home in
the Big Bend area for the Easter season. The scene features many colol'

lui Easter animals and accessories. Mr. and Mrs. Rizer have no small
children at home but do the extensive decorating for tbe delight of the
many children who do pass their home each day.

Strike restraining order continues
An informal discussion on a temporary restraining order dealing
with picketing of striking county
highway employes at the Meigs
County Landfill replaced' ~ hearing
on the matter in the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court Thursday
morning.
Judge John C. Bacon, common
pleas court; Rick Crow, county
prosecutor, representing the county,
and attorney Doug Little met in the ·
judge's chambers at which time it
was agreed to continue a temporary
restraining order for 14 days against
the picketing at the landfill.
The employes through their at-

tomey and union indicated they of Local lOBO, consent to or will offer
have no objections to continuing the no opposition to the continuance of a
temporary restraining order temporary restraining order and-or
thereby dissolving the need for a the granting of the preliminary inhearing on the matter.
junction preventing picketing of the
The employes and union issued the Meigs County Landfill site as sought
following statement following the in- by the Meigs County Commissioners
formal agreement:
in the complaint.

Meigs County and, as a result , will
not continue." .
Judge Bacon said no testimony
was taken on the granting of a
preliminary in junction since it was
agreed that the temporary
restraining order would continue for
14 days.

"The American Federation of
" It is hoped that this action will
State, County and Municipal Em- relieve tensions which exist between
ployes, The American Federation of the union and commissioners and
State, County and Municipal Em- will expedite resumption of
ployes, Ohio Council B, and the negotiations and lead to a speedy
Meigs Lvunty Highway Department resolution of the strike.
Employes, Chapter LOcal 1080,
"The union feels pi cketing the lanalong with the individual members dfill is not in the best interests of

County htghway department
workers have been on strike for over
two weeks and were picketing at
both the county highway garage and
the couhty landfill until the temporary restraining order prohibiting
picketing at the landfill was issoed
by Judge Bacon last Thursday.

Operators may form own negotiating team
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (APl - A
new association of independent coal
operators will mobilize a negotiating
team of its own next week if the
Bituminous Coal Operators
Association and United Mine
Workers fail to break deadlocked
talks, the group's organizer says.
"We want to let it be known that
we're not satisfied with these on-

again, off-again negotiations," said
Jack Henry, organizer of the
Unionized Coal Employers
Association and president of
Charleston-based Riverside Industries Inc.
In the coalfields Wednesday,
violence was reported in West
Virginia and coal trucks were
showered with rocks in Kentucky.

Two Philpott Coal Corp. guards
were arrested on charges of firing at
two UMW officials outside the
·union's District 29 headquarters at
Beckley, authorities said. Two
shotguns and ammunition were confiscated.
Kentucky state police said rocks
were thrown at coal trucks passing a
group of about 50 pickets near

KRISTIN ANDERSON

PAMELA CROOKS

Pikeville. No injuries or arrests
were reported.
The union's 160,000 members have
been on strike for 22 days , and have
rejected one proposed agreement by
better than a 2-1 margin . Talks are
scheduled to resume Friday in
Washington, D.C. Negotiations started anew Tuesday but were recessed

'

Auxiliary units
name ·delegates
to girls' state

WE HAVE MOVED
EFFEOIVE MONDAY APRIL 13, 1981

Delegates and alternates to
Buckeye Girls State, the American
legion Auxiliary's amual workshop
in democracy, have been selected by
the auxiliary units of Drew Webster
Post 39, Pomeroy, Feeney·BeMett
Post 128, Middleport, and ~cine
'Post 602, Racine.
Buckeye Girls State will be held at
Aahland College, Aahland, Ohio,
June 13-20. '
An orientation tea for the
delesates, alternates and their
parents has been iet for Aprll26 at
I :30 p.m. at the MI. Moriah Baptiat
Orurch Ill MJM!epnrt. The tea will
be~ llr -ben of the lewill
11an11J ht 1$3 Auillary ahd Mn.
Marpnt Orlke, director clgovernment· lor Girls state, will be the
apeaker. Deleptes ~ :
Southern High School: Rita Sloter,
dlughter of Marion Sloter of Racine.
Melp High School: Krlltin Andenon, dlugllter of Mr' and Mrs.
.William Anclei'IOII; Pamell
dlucJ!Ier of Mr. and Mrs, Edward
Crocib, Mlddllport;
Duoa-,
dlu&amp;l*r of Mr. and Mnl. 'nlo!llu
Dallller, Middleport; Melanie
Dillard, dlugiUr of Mr. and Mn.
Ropr F. Dillard, Pomeroy; Timmy

, OUR NEW ADDRESS WILL BE:

555 PARK ST., MIDDLEPORT

NEW
'

*
STORE HOURS: Monday thru Friday
LOCATION
7:00 a.m. til 5:00 p.m.
Saturday 7:00 a.m. til 3:00 p.m.
PHONE 992-6611 or 992-2709
WATCH FOR GRAND OPENING SPECIALS!

I
-- ,I

L

J&gt;

;v
;l!;

"'
~

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;SU·PPLY

eroou,

s-n

PARK ST., MIDDUPORT, OHIO
•'

j

----~----~,--~-----~------

--t

Eichinger, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Eichinger, Pomeroy; and
Laura Smith, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Oacar Smith, Route 2,
Pomeroy.
RITA SLOTER is sponsored by the
American legion Auxiliary cl
Racine POll! 802, Racine. A junior ill
Southern High School, she )s a member of the French Club and the
National Hoaor Society. She. is a
member of the Fint Baptl8t ChurcH
of Racine and active with the Baptiat
Youth FellOWihip there.
.
KRISTIN ANDERSON Ia e&amp;apOIIIIOI'ed by the Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter of Beta Slpna Pli
SororUy and the American Legion
Alllill8ry of F-y B1 olltt· Pelt
Ia, Mldd1eport. At ..... lfl&amp;b
School she playa vlll'litJ bubtbiD
and IIIII the liris' tradE IAIIm. She II
aleoa member of the NatiOMI Hlllor
Society, 11 aetitt 1111be jllllior JII'GIII
ccmmltlee lhil yell', IIIII in the .
World Affairl Club. She bu
been dve tluqb the,_. in 4-H
IIGit and u
of the
Meip 4-H Pltuure Rldn llld 1111
llWI'' In the Meip Ridlll&amp;
Clab IIIII the Ohio Valley Hone
(Continued oo pqe 101

il'
RJTASLOTER

a

PI'*"""

4-

I

MELANIE DILLARD

TAMMY EICHINGER

'

UURASM1111
~

SHERRY BEEGLE

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