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W, coal companies to meet Wednesday
/ Officials Of the United Mine
, Warkers plaming to meet wed·
nesday ~th a representative from
three eastern Ohio coal companies
to discuss an independent pact ·say
they're not sure what
be
resolved at the session.
District 6 President Ed Bell said
MondBy that he was told by the
union's international headquarters
in Wasliington to attend the meeting.

will

"We're just small strip ~e co~ (UMW President Sam Church)
parues trymg to make a go of 1t while would e1ther have to conduct the
the strike iB going on," Bryan said. meeting himself or appoint someone
"We're not m~bers ~f B~_A. but to do so, and that has not happened, "
thest~ike IS hurtmg business.
sa1d UMW spokesman Arne! Chur·
OffiCials at UMW headquarters ch. .
.. .
.
.
said the mo:eting, to be held at Cam·
Uruon offiCials m Washingt~n ~1d
bndge Holiday Inn, camot be con· they do not know when negotiations
Sl~,ereda negotiating session. .
. might resume. Talks broke off April
For that to happen, the Chairman 17.
of'the mternatlonal executive board
BCOA bargainers were invited

"!was told if we didn't go to the Co. of Dresden - fonnerly Gilbert
meeting, there might be some kmd Fuel - plans to seek an agreement
Of labQr charges flied," said Bell, with District6 officers retroactive to
who represents about 15,000 miners the old pact's expiration March 27.
in southeastern Ohi~ and the West
UMW miners struck March 27
Virginia Panhandle, off the job for 33 against the Bit.uminous Coal
days.
Operators Association. They re1ecAbe Bryan, director of employee ted a tentative agreement four days
relations for Bolch Mining . Co. of later b~ a 2-1 margin despi~ a J.6.inBloomingdale, Crown C1ty Mining of crease m wages and benefits, c1tmg
Crown City and Muskingum Mining 'the pact's language.

•

•

at y
Voi.30,No.9
Copyriphtecl1981

.,

back to the bargaining table Friday,
but had not replied as of Monday,
Arne! Church said.
Though JackHenry Of Whitesville,
W.Va. 1s trymg to orgaruze HIdependent talks between the .uMW
and non-BCOA . coal comparues m
Appalachia, the director of the Ohio
Valley Coal Operators Association
sa1d such talks are not part of a
growmg trend .

•

enttne
2 sec1ions,12 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, April2B, 1981

lS Cents

A Multimedia Inc. N_ewspaper

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Reagan pitches spending·-proposals
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WASffiNGTON (AP)- President
Reagan, capitalizing on rising
popularity since last month's
assassination attempt, reassumes
public command of his budget battle
tonight with an appeal to Congress to
stop talking and start acting.
Aides said Reagan will tell a joint
session in the nationally televised, 9
p.m. EDT speech that Congress
must shed the "old and comfortable
way" because "a day Of decision is
near" for his tax and spending cut
propoll!lls.
"High taxes and excess spending
growth created our economic
mess," one source said Reagan will
say. "To fail to act will delay- even
longer and more painfully - the
cure that must come."
The speech, expected to last about
15 minutes, comes as the administration program is picking up
speed with Congress nearing key

votes this week. Conservative
Republicans on the Senate Budget
Committee neared agreement on a
revised budget blue!ll'int, and House
Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. said
enough Democrats may erose over
to give the iresident a victory in the
House.
The address is Reagan's third on
the economy but his first public appearance since he was shot March
30.
It comes on the eve.ofhis 1ooth day
in office, and the seleCtion of the well
of the House is intended to focus the
drama of Reagan's fti!mergence on
the forefront Of the fight . for his
economic program.
One White House official, who
asked not to be identified, said the
president's attitude1s: "Look, we've
talked about the economy. We've
analyzed it. Now Is the time to do
something. Now it's time to take the
courageous measures to get the

bag

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Group seeks 285,000 signatures

'

COLUMBUS- 'l1l!l. C!lmrnittee for Fair and Impartial Redistricting
held 10 press conferences across Ohio to emphasize the need to place
its amendment on the November ballot.
·
FAIR officials, who conducted the conferences Monday, said the
proposal seeks to end the gerrymandering of c'ongressional and state
office districts, or dividing by politics. Any person or group could sulr
mit dlstrictlng plans based on established criteria requiring
population equality, thefsaid.
The redistricting plan best meeting the requirements will be applied, said Joan Lawrence, the panel's vice chairwoman.
The group Is seeking 2115,lXMI signatures to put the issue on the
November 3 ballot. Supporters include the Ohio Republican Party, the
Ohio Fann Bureau, the Ohio Council Of Churches and the Ohio League
of Women Voters, Ma. Lawrence said.

'

·~·229•.
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•.

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bag •

Board agamst gas deregulation
COLUMBUS - The Ohio Consumers' Counsel governing board has
voted unanimously to oppose the inunediate deregulation of natural
gas.
"'I
.Consumers' Counsel William Spratley said the board voted last
week to take "all appropriate measures" at the federal level including interventions before the Federal Energy Regulatory Corn- ·
mission. His first step was to send a letter to Ohio's congressional
delegation infonning them of the board's stand, be said.
The board did not &lt;1pp(l6e federal provisions of the National Gas
Policy Act of 1978, which allows for gradual deregulation of interstate
sales Of natural gas, SpraUey said. There Ita potential threat of immediate decontrol Of Ohio's residential customers and Ohio industry
~~
'

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his own hand."
The full House is likely to take up
the budget by the end Of the week.
The House Budget Conunittee approved a $714.5 billion budget, and
Rep. Delbert L. Latta, R.Qhio, and
Rep. Phil Granhn, a conservative
Texas Democrat, have proposed a
$689 billion alternative that Reagan
is expected to fomially endorse in
tonight's speech.
Speakes said Reagan, who
outlined his economic program in an
address to the nation on Feb. 5 and
also delivered a state of the economy
address to Congress on Feb. 18, feels
"it is important to go again to em·
phasize" his views on the economic
legislation.
The administration seems to have
regained momentum lost when
Reagan was sidelined with a gunshtt
wound in the lung a month ago, and
tonight's speech might be just icing.

Board, deputies
reach agreement

311.

Apples

economy back on the path."
The president, who is not yet
working full time in the Oval Office
again, was putting the final touches
on the speech today.
He worked on the message at his
Camp David, Md., retreat over the
weekend and met with his speechwriter, his congressional lobbyist
and the deputy chief of staff when he
returned to the White House on Monday.
The spe~c hwriter , Ken
KhaChigian , tQOk the notes Reagan
had made on a draft and was
preparing a clean copy for the
president's final approval today , according to deputy White House press
secretary Larry Speakes.
Speakes said the president also
planned to make a personal referen·
ce to the assassination attempt,
although that will be "something he
writes out himself ... straight from

•

Israeli planes down Syrian 'copter

BEIRUT, Lebanon - Israeli warplanes shot down a Syrian belicopter gunship in central Lebanon todaY., kilJing four Syrian troops,
newsmen on the scene reported. The Israeli military corrunand In Tel
Aviv acknowledged the helicopter WBfl shot down but did not provide
details.
.
. •
· It was the first direct Israeli intervention reported in the C11l'rent
fighting between Syrian forces and Lebanese rightist Cluistian
militiamen in central and eastern Lebanon and the first claah Of
Israeli and Syrian aircraft this month.
A statement by the Israeli military conunand, issued in response to
a question, said the Syrian helicopter had been "attacking and mur·
derlng Lebanese Chrtstlans."
Reporters In Lebanon said two bellcopter gunshlps'were Dying back
to base at east Lebanon's Rayak military airfield from operations
against Christian militiamen in the central Sannlne mOiintatn range
when they were intercepted by high-flying Israeli jets.

Today's lottery winner ·
ClEVELAND - The number &amp;elected Monday night in the Ohio Lot·
tery's dally game "The Number" Ia 507.
The lottery reported earnings of $535,336.50 f1'011'1 the money
Wll&amp;ered on the drawing. Lottery officlall1 aaid iales prior to the
drawing totaled .-,906.50, and holders of winning Uckellare enUtled
to share $321,570.
·

Mayor H~ffman authori~d
to take option on property
Middleport MQyor Fred Hoffman
was authorized to take a six month
option on five acres Of land on Locust
St., when Middleport Village Council
mel in ·regular session Monday
night.
Mayor Hoffman said that the option on the land, owned by the
Goeglein Brothers, will be taken for
six months at a fee Of $1. T~ land
'11111Y be needed to Coincide with a
HUD housing grant which appears
headed for approvaL Council also
authorized Mayor Hoffmah to make
final appUcation for the $712,lXMJ,
HUD grant which pnMdes funds for
a water tank Improvement and
hoUBing.
During the relative short meeting,
council also discussed the placement
of uilllty building on the edge of an,
alley and It was agreed to report the,
matter to Harold Chue since
requirements are that such.
bulldlng.s be five feet from the alley
line. Council gave a first reading to
an ordinance closing an alley near
the Motley resldenee between
Hamilton and Locust St The alley Is
partially clOied now and action WaB!
begun on the official closing after a·
petition signect b)' •five property

Showen and thunclentonns llkely tonighl lows in the mld-601.
clOudy and cooler Wednesday with attend lilowen In the
Jll01'11ing. Hlghlll6-7'0. Chance ol rain 70 parcenl tGnlght 1111150 percelt
MOitly

Wednelda)'. Wlndl Wllllterly 1G-IO mph tontcbt.

.Er 'rd C*o FtlftCUt- 'nlunday throo&amp;bSaturday: Fair and

mild 'l'hunday and Friday. Willi*' and a cl1anc:e ollhonrllllltul'
da)'. Hlghlln the IIIJ 'ftuoaday and Friday and In the 'Ill Sa~.
OvemiCht Iowa in the nJid.40I to Jllld.all.

owners near the alley was presented
to council, as required.
Several low locations on streets
were discussed since these locations
are allowing the collection Of watesr
during rains. It was agreed toraise
these locations during the resurfacing processes. Councll discussed
drainage from a mine onto property
owned by Floyd Brown and it was
agreed that village workers canntt
be sent onto private property to
make any such corrections. Coun·
cilman Marvin Kelly reported that a
four-way stop at Main and Seventh
Sts., Is being Ignored by some
motorists and suggested police wat·
ch the·locatlon more carefully for offenders. Councibnan Carl Horky
reported that two new type street
lights being installed by Columbus
and~themOh!oElectricona trial
buis will be placed on Grant St
Council dlscua8ed the need for hot
mix patching of holes with Councilrnan Jack Satterfield reporting on
the need for such repatr on Park and
Maple Streeta.
Attendlng the meeting were
Mayor Hoffman and Councilmen
Kelly, Satterfield, HO!ty, Dewey
Horton and WJ.W,m Walters.

a

,

Weather

made available by the com·
missioners on April20. "
Sheriff Proffitt also issued a
statement in regard to the set·
tlement.
"The union, the sheriff and the
Meigs County board of com·
missioners met today, Monday, to
finalize the details of a contract
negotiated between the parties.
"The board· of commissioners
voted unanimously, by board
resolution, to ratify the agreement
betWeen the sheriff and the union.
"The ratified contract is for a one
year period and includes recognition
of the union, seniority, grievance
procedure and the following
economics: effective April 'l:l, 1981
the employees can select an optlon
of : 1.60 cents per hour wage in·
crease: 2.25 cents per hour wage in·
crease plus one-half paid premium
for hospitalization insurance.
"The contract tenninates on April
1, 1982. The agreement and
ratification ends a 2!klay strike by
the Meigs County sheriff's
deputies.'·

Astrike by Meigs County sheriff's
deputies is over.
The Meigs County Board of Conr
missioners issued the following
statement Monday.
"Aone-year contract between the
Meigs County sheriff and his em·
ployes was agreed upon today and
approved by the Meigs County board
Of commisaioners, ending a work
stoppage by the sheriff's employes
that has been in existence, off and
on, since April 1.
"The contract was worked out
within the framework of the amount
of money proposed to Sheriff PrOffitt
on April 20, by the board of conr
missioners.
"That proposal called for the
sheriff's -employes to receive a 25
cents per hour wage increase and
one-half Blue Cross-Blue Shield paid
hospitalization insurance, at an annual cost to the county of all'
proximately $11,800. Under the ac· .
cepted plan those employes who
presentiy have insurance by another
mesns may accept the insurance
money in salary, providing it does
not exceed the amount of meony

I

Deer killed in Mo~day accident
A deer was killed when It ran Into tempting to leave the driveway at a
the path of a vehicle driven b)" Harry local nl&amp;bt club lflllt control ol the
Carleton, 29, Rt. 2, Coolville Monday vehicle he driving and struck
at 12:30 a.m. on SR 7 the Meilf and wtt.nded Junk vehicle that
County Sheriff's Department repot' wu parked on the parking lot.
ted.
lla)'MI8flt out v( his vehicle and left
The department lnveatlcated an on foul Ha)'DII wu cited to Meigs
accident that occurred on private CountY Court on aeharge of reckless
. property Monday at 4:15 p.m.
op ratlon.
Bull Haynes. Pomeroy. in at

SUPPORTING REAGAN 'S POLICY - Participants of the U. S.
Chamber of Commerce annual meeting in Washington rally on the east
steps of the Capitol Monday. Small business executives attending the
meeting held the rally to support Preisdent Ronald Reagan's economlc
proposals. I AP Laserphoto 1.

Pomeroy man injured
A Pomeroy man was injured in a
one-car accident on SR 124 early
today , according to the Gallia-Meigs
Post of the Ohio Highway Patrol.
The patrol said Curtis L. Holliday,
27, was eastbound at 12 :58 a.m.
when he lost control of his vehicle ,
went off the right side of the road
and collided with an Ohio Power Co.
utility pole.
Holliday was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the Syracuse
emergency squad, where he was
treated and released.
His vehicle was severely damaged

and Holliday was cited for no
operator's license.
The patrol investigated another
one-car accident in Meigs County
Monday.
According to the report, a vehicle
driven by Edward L. Diddle, 23, Rt.
1, Middleport, was westbound on CR
~at 4:45 p.m. when the auto went off
the right side of the road, lo:&gt;l con·
trol, came back onto the road, went
of! the right side again and overturned.
Diddle was not injured and his
vehicle was moderately damaged.

Village projects
listed at meeting
Propased improvement projects
for the county were placed in
priority listing by members at·
tending a meeting of the Meigs
County Regional Plaming Com. mission at The Fanners Bank
building Monday afternoon .
Greg Keller of Buckeye HillsBuckeye Valley Regional Development District presented the list of
projects which members listed as
things they would like to see carried
out within the next two to six years.
The discussion revealed some of
the projects have been funded
aleady.
The projects include Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service, in fun·
ding cycle, $65,lXMI for purchase of
radio equipment to create a more ef·
ficient central radio system ;
congregate housing for elderly,
county project, $1,418,028, Farm
Home Administration, project to
construct 40 units for elderly rental
on a site adjacent to Meigs Senior
Citizens Center; water system inlprovements, Racine, $50l,lXMI, HUD
money, improvements including a
200,000 ·gallon storage tank, 60 new
water tapa, 1D,lXMI feet Of six inch
pipe, t501,lXMI.
Meigs County access road,
$380,000, Farmers Home Ad·
ministration, provide safe and
reliable access to county hoiJpltal,
clinic, emerge!l(ly medical service
station and mUlti-purpose human
resource center; water supply and
distribution system improvements,
$500,000 ARC, for replacement t:i
2,?00 feet of existing waterline and
storage tank, etc., all funded at the
present tlnie.

Big Bend housing project,
Pomeroy and Middleport, $800,lXMJ in
HUD money, to rehabililate low and
moderate income housing stock and
provide in centives to private
builders for new single family
housing, upgrade dwellings of
physical handicapped residents plus
other improvements, with Middleport's portion already funded.
New parks project, Middleport,
$500,lXMJ BOR funds, construction of
two new perks in the downtown area
and along the Ohio River front including a bikeway ; water storage
line extension, Racine, $300,lXMI,
Farm Home Administration money,
to provide water service to newly annexed areas of village ; fire station,
Racine, t5G,OOO, Fann Home Administration, to provide construction Of two bay fire station;
water line extensions, in addition to
one currently underway, $1,000,lXMJ
Farm Home Administration, ex·
pansion of county's rural water
system to promote residentiaVindustrial development in Tuppers Plains-Chester Water 'District;
fire station expansion, Middleport,
$500,lXMI HUD, addition of 2,1150
square feet to village present
firehouse for EMS equipment
storage.
The commission dlacussed 11. preapplicatioo for CGIIfli~ ' tl •
units of housing in Racine .wNch
would be rentalll for 11enlor citizens,
handicapped persons and othera.
The pre-application hu been filed
tiy McArthur Village Ltd. of
Newark. C. E. Blakeslee, exeeutlve
director, amounced two ~
meetings to be held this week.

•

�/

The

Ohio

Commentary

'Frankenstein Follies '

Pag-2-The Dally Sentinei
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
-Tuesday, Aarll28,ntl

set Friday, Saturday at
Meigs High School

Runnymede in Georgiua__________~Ja::.:.:m.:..=e&amp;:;J,..:......::.

Under the direction ofT. Edwin
Harkless, vocal music supervisor, and Celia McCoy, faculty
drama coach, vocal students of
Meigs High School will present a
musical, "Frankenstein Follies"
at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday
nights in the high school
auditoriwn.
Taking the romantic leads will
be Jeff Carson and Linda Eason
while Fred Young will be in the
role of Frank Frankenstein, a
"modem descendant of the
original doctor." Jeff Nash and
Jill Byers will play George and
Elizabeth Frankenstein with
Gerald Spencer as "Frank's
assistant" and Danny Riggs as
Mike, the monster. Members of
the Frankenstein Is Still Here
Club will be played by Sheila
Horky, Sandy Herdman, Teresa
Barrett and Freda Chapman. .
Other principal roles will be
played by Jean Horton, Tammy
Black, Deena Neece, Camille
Swindell, Susan Danner, Sue
Taylor, Rochelle McDaniel and
Lori Maynard.

K.:;.;.;il.t,;..:;pa..:.:...;trt:...;..:...;..'ck

WASlUNGTON - It's a long, long
way from the meadow of Runnymede to the insignificant streets of
Buford, Ga., but the spirit of Magna
Carta was breathing last week in
Dixie. The U.S. Supreme Court once
again affirmed the doctrine that a
man's home is his castle.
The opinion that will be reported
as Steagald vs. United States is
something less than a landmark.
Other Fourth Amendment cases will
be invoked more often. Nevertheless, the high court's decision is
important; it reminds us that even a
bunch of cocaine smugglers huve
rights that cannot be violated by the
cops.
These were the facts: Back in
January 1978, agents of the Drug Enforcement Administration received
word through a reliable informer
that a federal fugitive named Ricky
Lyons might be found in the Atlanta
area. Agent Kelly Goodowens

located the lakesid~ cottage in
Buford where Lyons was thought to
be hiding. Goodowens put together a
raiding party and descended upon
the cottage. The agents swiftly grabbed two men who were just Jutside
on the driveway.
One of the men was Gary Keith
Steagald; the other was his partner
Hoyt Gaultney. Inside the cottage
was Gaultney's wife Cathy. It transpired that all three of them lived
there. Several agents went to the
floor, demanded entrance, and told
Cathy Gaultney they had an arrest
warrant for the fugitive Lyons. "He
isn't here," she told them. They put
her at gunpoint against a wall and
searched the house.
Sure enough, Lyons wasn't there.
He disappears from the story at this
point. But something else was there :
43 pounds of top-grade cocaine, concealed in a couple of suitcases. Hoyt
Gaultney and Steagald subsequently

The Daily Sentinel
II J f uurt Strl'l'l
llunwru,·. Ohio

6l.J.992-2 J56

DE \ ltTEI• TO Tf-lf INTEREST OF" TH t: Mt:u;s.r~U SCV'Il AREA

Q~
~m~ r""T""l-..lL.-.-,~d·~
'qjv
ROBERT L. WING EIT
PAT WHITEHEAD
,\ ~.-. i~Lant f&gt;uhli~ht•r/ 1

were tried on drug charges. The
record doesn't show what happened
to Gaultney, but Steagald got two
concurrent five-year sentenc~ He
appealed.
His appeal rested on familiar
Fourth Amendment grounds. The
DEA agents had no search warrant
for the cottage: they had only an
arrest warrant for a fugitive who
wasn't there. Under the ex·
clusionary rule, Steagald contended,
evidence that is seize&lt;\ illegally cannot be legally admitted at trial.
Steagald's lawyers demanded that
the suitcases, the cocaine and other
paraphernalia be excluded. The trial
court and the Fifth Circuit refused to
buy this argument and thus upheld
the conviction. Last week the
Supreme Court reversed.
In an opinion by Justice Thurgood
Marshall, the court held that the outstanding arrest warrant was not
enough. The agents had both the
time and the opportunity to seek a
formal search warrant for the cot·
tage. So far as t~ occupants of the
cottage were concerned, they were
"third parties." They had rights of
privacy, as precious as the rights of
English freemen in the days of King
John. The unwarranted search was
"unreasonable." If it were otherwise, said Marshall, police could
arm themselves with an arrest
warrant for a single person and then
search ali the homes of the in·
dividual's friends and acquaintances.

Juslice William Rehnquillt, dissenting, scoffed at his colleagues'
"ivory tower rilisconception" of the
realities of law enforcement. Marshall's "beflllilingly sinople" formulation, he said, "sinoply will not
wash." Rehnquillt thought· the
evidence should be admitlf!d and the
conviction affirmed.
It is (18inful to say this, for

Rehnquist usually ill an expositor of
sound law, ·but this time he was
wrong and · Mly'8hall was right.
Granted, the aCCUBed persons in this
case were not mode'- of civic virtue.
Evidence disclosed that they were
engaged in a major smuggling
operation, bringing in cocaine (rom
Colombia in the hollowed-out bases
.of ornamental lamps. The seized

drugs had a wholesale value of $2.5

million.
That ill inunaterlal to the larger
issue. Seven and a half centuries ·
ago, the doctrine was laid down in
Magna Carta that free men have
rights that not even the ~ may
violate. On balance, it Is far more
important to preserve such righls
than to lock up a dealer in coke.

HONORED - Dr. and Mrs. Raymond C. Reuter,
Spencer Road, Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Riffle, Rock Spiiogs Road, Pomeroy, were honored
with a dlnoer at the Meigs Ion Friday night. Both

couples were observing their 4llth wedding aonivensaries. They were presented with a decorated
cake aod gifts.

Gt•nrral Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
\'r \\ !1' Ed itnr

1\ .\I E:'IlHf:H uf Thl' A!&gt;~uda tt'd Prrs:&lt;i, Inland 0&lt;~11~ Prrs~ Assor iation and thl'
,\ mrnnu1\ 't'\4!-p:l pr r P u bl i~h• ·n Assor ia tiun.
·

ASTRO
'

GMPH
April29, 1981
· Dealings this coming year with
large organizations should turn out
to be beneficial for you. Don't be
afraid to approach the big guys if
you feel you have something about

~ --

l. f11'E il'l OF 01' 1~10\ ~m \H•kuml·d . Tilt'} shu uld bt&gt; lrss than:JOO 'll·urds lung. All
it'!'n• Hr~ ~ubj_t ·c t lu t· dit ~l)(. run! mus.t bt• si ~nt'd \lllh namr. addrrss and tdr ph ollt'
IIIUnhrr . ~ ~~ Ull!l l ~ nt•d lr llrr;, "til bt' pubh~hrd . L1• 1trr~ shuuld lw in ..:uud l.a!oilt' . addrr~sln,ll
' ''U'''· nulpt· r ~umditi• · ~ .
•

Computers and th e
floating mortgage
Those who greet electronic computer developments with suspi~ion and
cynicism - "Yeah, what'll it do for me," or "Big deal, I'll bet it won't help
me"- have more evidence to back their views.
Regulators last week told federal thrift institutions, which had COf1!1plained
it was dangerous to make fixed-rate, long-term mortgages in a 1oiatile
economic climate. that hereafter they could raise or lower rates and shrink
or lengthen terms to refl ect new economic conditions.
Possi ble result: a monthly mortgage bill to customers that might rise or
fall from the previous one, or whose terms might be extended or decr~sed
by several day s or weeks or months, or by fractions thereof.
This development, which likely will be hailed as an advance by lenders
and damned as a regression to usury by borrowers, is one of the latest contributi ons to society by advances in electronic computer technology.
Twenty years ago it could not have been done, or certainly not without
rooms full of clerks in'green eyeshades feverishly pushing their pencils erasing, checki ng, rechecking, never sure they were right.
Beca use it could not be done back then - and because there was little in·
centive to changes rates and terms by the month, there being little of the
volatility now seen in the marketplace - homebuyers enjoyed mortgages
whose monthly rates were all worked out 30 years in advance.
Now , thanks to inflation and unpredictable interest rates, and through the
good offi ces of the electronic computer. it is almost over. What couldn't be
done then can now be done in the blink of a computer light.
Should Americans thank electronics? Well, the argument being made is
that without nexibile rates nobody but the loan officer's relatives would be
able to get any mortgages at all. For that, a mumbled thanks.
Beyond that, many Americans will find this "advance" just one more
nuisance, one more variable, one more day nearer an ulcer.
There are many precedents. Have you noticed lately that you are being
told what you think. ''Fifty-one percent of Americans between tl1e ages of '!I
and 32 believe that they will be older five years from now." Or, "Americans
by a 2-1 margin believe they should be earning more."
With the electronic computer you allegedly can be told in advance who you
will elect as president, what you will be eating five years from now, and
what, given your income, what your Jiving conditions should be.
Variable mortgage rates might indeed be necessary, but those who will
have to wrestle with them have a right to wonder if the computer isn't part of
a plot rather than an inert instrument of change.

.

Berry's

World~---

which they should know .
TAURUS (April 20-May 201 Your

Politics--art of cOmpromise
WASlUNGTON (AP) - Politics
may be the art of compromise, but in
Washington this sometimes entails
making a compromise appear uncompromising.
When President Reagan addresses a joint session of Congress
tonight, it will , no doubt be a
dramatic pitch for enacbnent of his
econorruc program.
And judging from past statements
by top administration officials, the
president will make as strong a plea
as possible for approval of the
package intact. The tone will be
cooperation but not compromise,
deputy White House press secretary
Larry Speakes said.

That will take a little jugggling,
however, because vote-short House
Republican leaders already have
struck a bargain to win support from
conservative Democrats.
They did this by embracing an
alternative to the Reagan plan of·
fered by Rep. Deibert Latta, R.Ohio,
and conservative Rep. Phil Gramm,
I)-Texas. It cuts about ~ billion
more in federal spending than the
president wanted. ·
The White HoUSie, mindful that the
Latta-Gramm proposal : probably
represents their best shot in the
Democratic-controlled House, endorsed the measure.

But since Speakes and other
Reagan officials have been calling
compromise a "dirty word," a little
name surgery was in order.
So instead of the "Latta-Gramm
substitute," the measure was
quickly dubbed the "Reaganbipartisan" bill by White House officials. Republican congre) )$on$!
leaders adopted the new name as
well.
It isn't the first time that a namelift was the prescribed surgery for
political acceptance in Congress.
A few years ago, lawmakers used
the same tactic to answer complaints that they spend too much

imagination is your best asset today .
1

ted officials.
At Issue Is a bill enacted in the
waning hours of the 113th General
Assembly which granted. Salary increases for county !reasurers,
sheriffs, clerks of court, recorders,
prosecuting attorneys, engineers
and ecroners who took office Jan. 1,
1981.
Under terms of the bill, commissioners were required to approve
by Dec. 31, 1900, a resolution cer·
tifying that funds for the pay hikes

were available. Failure to do so left
salaries for the officeholders at their
existing levels.
Most commissioners implemented
the pay hikes. But they were denied
in Fairfield, Muakingum, Seneca,
Adams, Clenitont, Preble and
Miami counties.
John E. Murphy, executive director of the Ohio Pmlecutlng At·
tomeys Association, said several
statewide groups representing local
officeholders decided to challen~e

eluding some sons and daughters of
powerful local politicians- and thus
to hold down public (18yroll costs.
Blil the Washington-area students
aff~ed by the CETA cuts can't
depend on affluent homes to keep
them fed and housed. "Some of these
kids," says the director, "are supporting unemployed (18rents. Their
~;beckS make the difference In their
eatir)g or not! "

'

sOme 910,000 CETA-pald workers
in local governments lost their jobs
in l(llrlY A!&gt;ril· Others - including
the 'franticl callers - will be unemployed by fall.
It would be interestlng to know
what those students and their
families did before the November
election to .prevent Reagan from
power to suddenly end
campaign for Jimmy
John Al)derson? Did Uley
the man who promised
govemplent off the people's
and/ IO take govemmert
monev AJIIIY from workers at the
ehd of the economic scale?
they even registered to

the new law and hired Dowd to
represent them.
If succesaful, the legal test would
affect at least 49 c:iflclals In the
seven counties who othi!rwiae lfOUld
not be eligible for a P8Y raise for the
rest of their four-year tenns.

"We think we've got at least a~
50 shot or we wouldn't be doing II,"
Murphy said.

rivals.
vote?
Were their (18rents active in
The statistics suggest that the
politics in their communities? Did students whose jolla are threatened
they belong to civi&lt;l-improvement did not bother to vote. Blacb bet·
groups or block associations or the ween the ages of 18 and 25 have tile
worst registration and voting record
PTA?
Did any members of thOile of any sector of the U.S. population;
families hold membership in the fewer than 35 percent were
NAACP or similar organizations registered to vote in 1900.
working to ensure equal rights for
black people? .
.
.
course, Carter would not have
Witholil knowing those students, remained in the White House even If
we can assume some answers to he had received the vote of every
these questions.
eligible black. And a three-fold inThe od&lt;b are against their crease in NAACP membenhlp
belonging to the NAACP. Fewer would not have prevented Reagan'• _.
than one percent of black Americans · election or the economic pnlpO'•ll
are members of the 70.yea~ld that followed. American pol!Uca II
organization with the most suo- currently reflecting the fact that
cessful record of pratectlng and ex· 1110111 citizens seem want gover~~tendlng minority rights.
mentat alllevela to spend lea.
,
The odda are fairly even on
But 11 iln't all Improbable to
whether the (18rents of the students suggest that an aggreuiVII black
voted last November. If they did, electorate might have aent Relgan
they undoubtedly cast their ballots and the Congress a stronger
for Carter.
meuage last November that alarle
Sixty-one percent ~ all eligible body of Americana ~OM not want ~
blacka were regiatered to vote by . budget balance.ll on ita bleb. .
,
Election Day, and 55 percent of them
The students are right to register
actually cast thefr ballots. All but fear. Neat time they would be even
BeVen percent c:hoee Carter over hla more right to register to wte.

or

to

DOONESBURY
"How about letting the Pentagon take over
AMTRAK for Its MX system?"

Today in

hist~ry. • •

Today is Tuesday, Aprll28, the II 8th day of 1981. There are 247 days left
in the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On April28, 1952, war with Ja(l8n officially ended as a treaty signed by
the United States and 47 other nations went into effect.

only problems.
GEMINI (May 2l·June 201 Things
·are going on loday behind the scenes

time in rece88.
They simply decreed that the
breaks would no longer be called
recesses. The name was changed to
"district work period" in the House
and "non-legislative period" in the
Senate.
And when Congreaa created the
Department of Education 1a.st year
from the old Department of Health,
Education and WeUare, It could
have simply renamed ·what
remained of the parent 18ency the
Health and WeUare Depariment.
But the legislators opted for the
politically lesa-offenaive Department of Health and Human Services.

Where were they Nov. 4?..__ __J_ut_ian_Bo_n_d
"After the November election, the
students began to call,'' remarks the
director of a federally funded job
program employing black college
students.
"By January," she says, "the
number of calls increased and the
tonr became frantic. In the last month, Ule mood has shifted from fear to
panic to terror."
Those calls are coming from
Washington-area students who are
almost certain to lose their joba
because of Pre~ident Reagan's
budget cuts. Those joba are supported by the Comprehensive
Education and Trairung Act of 1974.
Ironically, CETA originated under.
President Nixon, an·o ther
Republican, as a central feature of
his New Federalism program of
returning tax dollars to local communities, whose officials were
thought better able to direct the
spendingofthatmoney.
\
True, CETA's original aim of of.
fering unskilled workers a first
chance to earn a P8Ycheck was
frequenUy abandoned 8.!1 cities and ·
counties increasingly used the funds
to P8Y their existing employ~ - in-

t can help put you steps ahead of

your competition. You'l l envis ion
possibil ities where they may see

.Seven county legal battle underway
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -A legal
challenge is under way in an attempt
to win a P8Y raise for officeholders
in seven Ohio counties who were left
out of a salary boost authorized by
the General Assembly last December.
Former Ohio Supreme Court
Justice David D. Dowd, Jr., Canton,
has filed lawsuits in Fairfield and
Miami counties seeking to overturn
the state law which permitted counties to veto pay hikes for their elec-

Grauge al the annual county grange banquet held Friday night at the
Salisbury Eltimentary Sehool. With Mrs. Halliday ts her daughter, Mrs.
Pauline AWas.

BOB HOEFLICH

·nntrul ll'r

WNG-TIME MI!;MBER- Mn. Rqby Halliday, right, Harrisonville

area, was recognized as a 74-year member of the Meigs County pomoll8

..
"
'
'

which could prove helpful to you
careerwise. Two friendly associates

PRJIIICIPALS- There were the priucipals at the
aonaal Meigs County Grange Banquet Friday Digbt at
the Salilbury Elementary School. From the left are
Mr. and Mn. Mendal Jordan; dep11Ues; Mr. aod Mrs.
Bill Glonery; Mr. and Mn. Robert Reed; Mr. aod Mrs.
o Arthur Crabtree, and Mr. and Mn. Earl Starkey. Mrs.

~Founders

Day fete at
Sportsman Inn, Athens
·by Beta Sigma Phi
Meigs County's three chapters of
Beta slginli Phi will join Thursday
. night for the annual observance ~
Founder's Day with a dinner (18rly
at theSportarnanlnn in Athens.
: The occasion will mark the 50th
Bnniversary of the founding of the
'Women's social, service, and
Cultural organization.
.' Debbie Finlaw will be toast·miJtress for the evening and Anrie
Olapman will present a special
mesaage from the Internatiohal
-Executive Council of Beta Sigma

l'h!.

.

"

~ Girl5 of the Year from each of the
Jthree chapters, Ohio Eta Phi, Xi
'G811111111 Mu, and Preceptor Beta
·Beta, Wlll be ~unced at the

&lt;banquet.
.
: Beta Sigma Phi, the largest Greek
letter sorority, has grown in il,!l 50
year hiltory fi'OIIl one chapter of
'!Ieven ~n to a sOrority of 250,001)
'WOmellactive in chapters in 32 coun-

tries •hroughoui ' the world.
.froclamatiOIIB noting the 50th an'nlverury have been signed . by
:l'resldllnt Ronald Reagan as well as
and mayors around the

aovernon

~·
It

Ellen Rife honored

•Ellen

Rife wu honored for having
ICIII thl JDCIII weilhl when TOPS OH
'1411 met r.cenUy at Rutland. RunIB"'IP for the honor was Linda

111na1t. Mra. Rife was p1111nted a
collar, • rlbboli and lllllllbers 1111111
·in blr hanoi'. Nellie U.W pnlided

at jilt lllllllinl· lnfarmation on
joiiUIIbe cl.. mly be obttined by

c:am.Toau

· Clark surgl~ol patient

.
'·
'

Glonery was the guest speaker. She is Ohio Stale
Grange secretary. Mr. Reed iB master of the Pomona
·Grange; Mr. Crabtree was master of ceremooies and
Invocation and benediction were by Mr. Starkey. Eotertalnment was by the Sloan FamDy of Albany and the
dlnoer was served by the Salts bury PTO.

II

Lln7 am. Pllt8L, Mlddl....,
1

llilicll

patiellt at Haller

lilldlcll c.mer. ·Hill raom lllllllber II
. )!
.

Social Calendar

are engineering matters.
CANCER· (June 21·July 221 Long
distance communications today
should turn out to be fortunate lor.all
involved. Each of you may Mve
good news to convey to the other .
LEO (July 2J·Aug. 221 Bolder·
than-usual . measures may be
require" today in order to achieve
yourexcellence
aim. Set indefini1e
goalS.
tor
what you
do. Strive
VIRGO !Aug. 2J·Sept. 221 Coat the
hard points you must make today
with a iDiend of fact , humor and
charm '"order 1o soothe a sensitive
ally whQSe help you may need .
LIBRo\1 (Sept. 2l·Oct. 23) It may
seem li~e you are called upon to do
so mu&lt;.P. for others today that it
leaves IIItie time for yourself. Serve
with a s;m ile. Your kindn•« will be
returneq.
SCORPIO !Oct. 24-Nov. 221 Dan
cupid "lay single you out for special
attention today , and do all he can to
makeltiings more joyful for you and
the one closest to your heart .
SAGitTARIUS !Nov. ll·Dec. 211

de~ire

Your
to commune
nature
is
an urfge you
should trywith
to satisfy
tOday . eather permitting, do a Iii·
lie yar

Layette sho1ver held
A layette shower honoring Mrs.
Sherry King Meckstroth was held
recently at the Bradbury Church of
Christ hosted by Debbie and Heather
Finlaw.
Games were played with prizes
going to Sherrie Barnhart and
Bessie King. Kathy Johnson won the
door prize. Cake, punch, coffee, nuts
and mints were served. A green and
yellow color scheme was carried
out.
Attending were Mrs. Marge Barr,

Mrs. Delores Bailey, Mills Rita
Bailey, Mrs. Johnson , Mrs. Ruth
Barnhart, Mrs. Bessie King, Mrs.
Farie Cole, Mrs. Farie Kennedy,
and Mrs. Naomi King.
Sending gifts were Jo Ellen Diehl,
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Barnhart, Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Haynes, Matt and
Kristy, Mrs. Jane Hess, Miss Cathy
Hess, Mrs. Gertrude Finlaw, Mrs.
Mary Hysell, Miss Kosti Hysell,
Mrs. Grace Chaney, Miss Rayanna
Cole, and Mr. and Mrs. Pat Webb.

May fellowship day set
"The Spirit of the Lord Frees-and
Unites" will be the theme for May To have guest speaker
Fellowship Day to be observed
The Hobson Church of Christ in
Friday by Church Women United of Christian Union will have a
Meigs County at the Racine Baptist missionary as guest speaker at the
Church.
missionary service, April 29, 7:30
A sack lunch will be held at noon p.m.
with the program to begin at 1:30
p.m. The 1981 service marks thef'-p;;;;;;;;;;!~~;;;;.
40th birthday of Church Women
United as a national ecwnenical
movement in which Christian
women Wl'lness to their faith and
unity in Jesus Christ. This year's
Ph. 992·5776 Syracuse, Oh.
service was written by women in
NOW OPEN FOR
SPRING SEASON
IllinoillandOhio.
The offering to be taken Friday
e Potted Plants
will go for two local projects, the
e Complete line of bedding
he Se
craft classes at t
nior Citizens
plants and hanging
Center, and the special education
baskets.
class in the public school system of
All Dozen Packs 95C doze_
Me1gs
· couny.
t Th
ha
t
H
ewomen vese
ours: OpenDaily9toi

HUBBARD'S
unnsE
.GREENnuu

~~a:g~oal~of~$~1~00~f~o~rth~e~tw~o~p~r~oj~ec~ts~·~f~:::::::s:u•:·:':to:S~~~~

work in preparation for

later plonting .
CAPRICORN !Dec. 22·Jan. 19)

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY Area You de~rve a break in your routine
Branch of the American Association at this ime, so try to spend some
t~ay with friends in some at·
of University Women, 6&lt;30 p.m. din- hours
five, ou door sport .
ner meeting at the Meigs Inn . . AQU RIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) You
e offered a f i nan cia l
Howard Frank, Meigs County · may
proposi•ion
by a member of
'
Auditor, to talk on county govern- yovr film ily.today
Give it serious conment and finances.
sideratinn . It could have merit. .
PI SCI'S (Feb. 20-March 20) Tnis is
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN CLUB,
a good day to catch up on correspon ·
7:30p.m. Tuesday at the Middleport de
nee or calls you feel YOU owe. Your
Begun in the midst of the First United Presbyterian Church. neglectP.d
friends will be delighted to
depression by Walter W. RQSS, Beta Mrs. Lennie Haptonstall and Miss hear trqm you.
ARIFlS (March 21-April 19) This
Sigma Phi was originally designed Nellie Zerkle to be hostesses.
could
be a fortunate day materially
to provide an outlet for women who,
lllGH SCHOOL NIGHT for eighth in bo1h Jsmall and large ways . Per ·
in those hard' financial times, could grade students and · their parents. sons who have your in terests at
not attend college and were obliged Princi(IBI James Diehl and Coun- heart wtll be your benefactors.
to remain home and support their selor Tino Flesher, Meigs High
. families. Ross provided these School, will discuss high school
women with a program of cultural program, course choice, etc. Studen· o
study so that they could have a cillllt- ts and parents invited. Refreshce at intellectual and social growth.
ments will be served hy members.of 0/iv~ Trustees to meet
the Parent-Teacher Forwn.
OIUO ETA PIU CHAPTER, Bela : A regular meeting of the Olive
Internationally, the chapters have
Townsi)ip Trustees has been set for
created several special funds to Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30 p.m. 7:30 p-~ Friday at the lire station in
·
which they contribute - the In- ·Tuesday at the Meigs Inn.
ReedsV.ille.
AMERICAN
LEGION
ternational Loan Fund tlirough
which members help each other, the
AUXILIARY,
Drew WebSter
Post!. - - - ~
Pomeroy, 7:30p.m.
jointmeeling
International Endowment Fl,llld 39,
of
juniors
and
seniors.
Mrs.
Charles'
,
which hall donated over a million
·dollars to health research groups, Marshall to have the program.
homes for underprivDeged chlldren
WEDNESDAY
and many other causes, the ExemWilDWOOD GARDEN CLUB
plar Fund which help support Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the home
Uteracy VIllage in India; and a of Mrs. Mary Nease.
college scholarship fund for members or their sons or daughters.

SOME PEOPLE THINK ALL
INSURANCE AGENCIES
ARE ALIKE..•WE'D
LIKE TO TAKE EXCEPTIOt(

992-6617

214 E . Main St.
• Automobile
• Homeowners

• Motorcycles
• Mobile Homes

• Bonds

Pomeroy 1 Ohio

• Lite- Individual &amp; Group
e Recreational Vehicles
eSpecial Risk Auton:'o.b~le
• Financial Respons•b•ltty
• Business Packages A Specialty

========~~::::::::::::::;;::::::::;;~~~;;;;~

Meeting date changed

Cultural and sOcial activities con-

The Middleport Garden Club will

tinue in the chapters and each year • meet on May 5 at the Middleport Firmembers are provided with .a dif• . st United Presbyterian Church not
ferent ouUirie of study In the liberal . today (TUesday) as earlier' anarta.
nounced.

'

THIS WEEKEND
AT
.
MEIGS INN
9 till 1 .
.

ALL UGAL BEVERAGES

SERVED

THE MEIGS INN .
,_ .

You Must Be 21 or AccomPIIIied
by Plllllt II lepl'GUirdiM

...PomenJJ,
--- Oh.

�.· ....

.,___

I
.

~,..,

.

&lt;i

.

' ·~

BY ~OIT WOLFE
advanced' him to second. John
.1
JA CKS0 1 THe Meigs Cremeans lashed'·an RBI double to
~. ·./
·Marauders .focused · t¥~ ·batting score Wayland. Afi~r Roger
Mltor League BaaebiU
'eyes to the tune of 12 hits, and le.ft Kovalchik singled in the third, Jerry
AMERICAN LEAGUE
·
··
Jackson with a conyincing 9-2 ~ · Fields hit a tremendous 400 foot shot
EAST
W L
Pel. GB • ov~r the Ironmen here Monday over the left center field fence for
7 4
.::Jl - everung in an SEOAL bjiseball con- ·- ·two.more Meigs runs. In the bottom
8
5
9
6
.600 test.
1
·
of the iruling Jackson notched its fir·'
7 · ~. 6
1
.[&gt;38
Hard-throwing
Je_
!
f
W
_
aylan
,
t1
gave
st
score on a Fouty single and
7 9 .4l8
2¥.z
t
.111 2"' up 10 hits, butlimited Ja-gksqn to jll!lt another blast by Allen Collins, the
·313 1"
two runs, in going the ~~ ta1 score now 3-2.
2
8!15 pick up the win for oaco bal~
Steve Ol)linger walked in the four4
•
;.\!
:~
Harrison's
Marauders·
Waylaoo
th
inning, advanced on a Troy
9
7
soo 1t struck out five and waif~ ii!St two Brooks single, then rode home on a
12
: ::.., in the victorious outing. Lil;Ster went Jim Boyer single. In the fifth sinning
9
12
200 n ~o,
five and a third innings fo~· Jacllson, Jerry Fields roped a single before
Mooday' aGamei
before being relieved by Woods 1who Terry Wayland lofted . a home run
Minnesota J, 10 innings
~~~I~~~
4,, Toronto 3, 12 hutings
finished
the game. The duet retired over the right field fence.
~,
S, - Chicago 2
nine
men
via strike outS-and i:lsued
In the sixth Meigs claimed its last
3, Detroit I
10, Bostoo 0
sixfreepasses.
' /
score on Miller, Kovalchik , and _
California 3, Oakland 2
Meigs plated the (irst.score' of the Fields' singles, Jeff Wayland, and
Only games .scheduled
Tueaday'a Games
game in _the second on .a Terry Terry Wayland walks, and a Steve
SeatUe (Clay 0.2) at MiMesuta (RedWayland walk and a Wild pitch that Ohlinger sacrifice that produced
fern 0.1)
Toronto {Bomback: H ) at Mllwa ukee
~
· /
three more runs.
(CaldweU 3-1), ( n)
'

recor"tL ~ . ·

i li

Chicago

(Dolson

at

1·1)

&amp;ltimore

(Stone 1-1) , (nl

KaMaS Cit.Y (Spli1torff H J at Cleveland
(Waits 2-0 ), (n l

New York (J ohn
(Schatzede r l-0 ), (nJ

2-l )

at

Detroit

Boston (Crawfo rd 0-U at Tuas (Jenkins 1·1 ), i n )
California (Travers
(Kingman 2-0 J, (n)

0.11

at

Oak hmd

Wedoesday's Games
New York at Detroit
SeatUe at Minnesota
Califomi1:1 at Oakland
Toronto at Milw1:1 u.k ~. 111 1
Chicago at Baltimore. lnl
Kansas City at Cleveland , 1.nl
Boston at Texas. 1ni

Sl.Lvuis
Montreal
Philadelphia

NATIONAl LEAGUE
F..AST
w L Pet. GB
9 2
.818

3

II
II
4

Pi tt.sbur\ h
New Yor
Chicago

6
7

I 13
WEST
II 3
9
7
8 7
7 12
II
12

Los Arqjeles
Atla nta
Cincinnati .
San F rancisco

.364
.0'11

5
51o,
10

.821 .563
.53.1
.368

•'

SHn Di e~jU
Houston

-I"

.638
.100

5

'

.7116

.353
.250

"'
5

H

8
,,,

Monday's Games
Philadelphia J, Montreal I

Los Angeles a, Sttn Frandsco 0
Only ga m e~ scheduled
Tuesday's Games
St.Louis (Rincon 2~1 at Chicago tKrukow 6-1)
Montreal ILea I). JJ at Philadelphia
i Chrislensoo 1-U, 111 1
H oll.!!l rn !Sutton 0-3 1 1:1 \ Albtnt.B

1M ont ~

fusco I-l l. In)

San !J i e~o:o t Wise lh1J at Cincmnatt 1LaCoss 6-2), 1n)
Pittsburgh /Rhoden 2~ 1 at New Yurk
!Scott 0-2) , In)
San FranciSCO 1Ripley 6-ZJ at Lu6 Ange.

les (Sutcliffe 2.0), 1111

Wedaesday'!I Gamn
St.L.uu.i.s at (fhicago
Mon tre&lt;~l at Phi111delphia, 1 n1
ll uuston 111 Atla nl..ll , In)
San Di e~o:o at Cmeinllll tl. i nl
Pittsburgh aL New Yo rk , {nl
Sctn Fnmdseo at U&gt;s Angeles.

t n1

TODA Y'S MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BA1"l'ING (2!1 at bats.) : Singleton1 Balli·
more, . ~ 1 2; Lansford, Boston, .4«1 ; Kemp.
Detroit, .397; Narrun, Seattle, .394 ; Burroughs, Seattle, .387.
RUNS :
R.Henderson.
Oakland, 21;
Carew , Ca l!fomia, 15; Armas, Cllkland,
13; Riv~ rs, TeiUI.s, 13; M ~ rph y, Oaklan d,
12; Wills, Texas, 12.
RBI: Armas, Dakland, Z2; Fisk, Chicago, 14; Murphy, ()tkland, 13; l..ynn,
Ca\ifomiil, 12; Smalley, Minrlelota, 12.
H IT S :
Ar ma :; .
Oakland.
26 ;
R.Henderson, Oak.land, 26 ; Zisk, Seattle,
Z.S; Kemp, Detroit, 23; Carew, California,
2Z; Paciore k, Seattle, 22.
DOUBLES: Armas, Oak land. 7: Singleton, Baltiml.ll1;! , 6; ft Henderson. Ql.kland, 6; Pad orek, Seattle, 6; 5 Tied With
i.
TRIPLES: Peters, Detrt.Jil, J; Cowe ns,
Detroit, 2: Hob!VII, CH!ifornia, 2; Castinu,
Minn~G...

2:

R. Hender.Kln ,

Oakland,

f&gt;l!tnam, Teus. 2.
HOME

RUNS :

2;

,
Annas,

Oakland,

6;

Zisk, Seattle, 6; Singleton, · Baltimure, 5;
Smalley, Minnesota, 5; Thom.1s, Mil·
waukee, 4_; ~ttles, ~ew York. 4; De.n
Ford, CaUforma, 4; Fuk, Chicagu, t
STOLEN BASES: R.Hendet'llon , Oak·
land, 13: J.Cruz. Seattle. 10: Randolph,
New York, 4; Garc11:1, Toronto, t ; Carew,
California, 4: Mm·phy, Oakland, 4: Habit&lt;,

"'

'

I

Eagl~s

nine and wa*ing five.
Eastern scored its runs in the first
when John Beaver singled, Wigal
walked, Mike Bissell singled, and
Gene Cole tripled over two RBis. In
the second Eastern took a·:Hi lead on
walks to Leonard, a Beaver single, a
Gary Griggs' walk, and a two run
single by 'Wigal. Southwestern
narrowed the margin to &gt;2 in the
third, but dropped to6-2 in the fourth
on a Bissell single.
The high flying Eagles put two in·
surance runs on the board in ,the top
of the seventh on a Wigal walk, a
RBI double by Bissell, a Cole walk,

BY SCOIT WOLFE
PATRIOT - In an important
SVAC league contest, Eastern's
Eagles glided by host Southwestern
11-5 in area high school baseball action. Eastern is now 6-2 in the SVAC
and is 13-3 overalL Southwestern is
&gt;3 in SVAC league play.
Greg Wigal went the distance for
the Eagles to pick up the win, scat·
tering eight hits, fanning six and
walking just three. Wigal threw hard
all evening long to senior bat·
terymate Gary Griggs. Wayne
Sizemore also went the distant-e. but
suffered the loss despite striking out

Milwa ukee, ~. 1.000, 0:64 :

Burns, Oli·

STRIKEOU'Oakland,
I'S · Keough
Qodkilln~ 24 ·
Longford,
18( F. O.m•t.ier',
Seattl e, 18: Eckersley, Boston, 11: Guido
ry, New York, 17; Bums, Chicago, 17;
M.Norru, Oakland, 17.

NATIONALI.EA.GUE

BATIING (ti llt bab): Collins, Cincinnati, .~1 ; Flynn, New York, .400; Rose,
Philadelphia, .391: Henderson. Chicawo.
.3110; Raines, MonLreal, .370.
Trill o,
Philadelphia,
13;
R U NS :
SChmidl. Philadelph.ill,
12; Templeton,
St.Louis, 12; Collina, CinclnnaU, 12: Car·
ter, Montreal, 11 ; Oawl!lon, Mon treal, 11 ;
Raine.o~ , Montreal, 1L
RBI : Schmidt , Philadelphia, IJ : Concepcion, Cin8innaU, 13; Garvey, Los Angeles,. 12; Ca rter, . Montreal , 11; Htl rr,
St.Louis, 11 : Hendnck, St.L.oui:J, 11 ; Murphy, AUanta, 11 ; Cabe ll, San Francisco,
II.
HITS : RORe, Philadelphia, '!1 ; Collins,
Clnctnna U. 24; Herndon, San Francisco,
22; Raine!, Montreal, 20; M.addur, Phlla·
delphia, 711; Baker, 1m Angeles, 2:0
DOUBLES: McBride, Philadelphia, 9;
Con ce~lon,
Cin cinnati, 8; Hernandez,
St.Louil, 7; Flynn, New York, &amp;; Rose,
Plliladelphla, 6; (}wnbliM, A!lanta, 6;
Washington, Atlanta. 6; Garvey. I.JJs Angeles, t ..
TRIPLES: Herr, St.Louis, 4; Templeton, St.l.Du.is,, 4: Baker, Los Angeles, 3;
Durham, Chicago, 2; Henderson , Chicago,
2; Richardll , Sam Diego, 2.
HOME RUNS, Schmidt , PhlladelphiB ,
1: Ctrler, Montreal, 1: Oowaoo, Mlllllrql,
4; ~n , New York, , 4; J.ThomPion;
Pitta
' ..
•
.
1 STO N BASES: Ralnes,' Montreal, 14;
•North, Stn Ff1lncil&lt;1&gt;, 10~ ~ Anpies, I ; IO&lt;&gt;llinl, Cincinillll; 6; 1 Tied
WlthS. ' ·
. \

I'[TCIIINq (2 Dllc!Jiono)' Valenzuela,
Loll Angel.,, H , 1.1100, 0.10: Sancler1011,

M«ltreaf, 3l!), 1.000, 1.33; Carlton, Ph.fla.dtlJIIIIa, ~.
1.1100, 2.45; Son1110n,
SI.LOula, ~. 1.1100, 3.3l; Hooton. i.ol AnRe._, M, 1.000, ~,43 ; ROlen, Mlllltrell,

,.,.J..
1.01111, 1.14; - . Plttobw:gh, u ,
l.uuu,'l S.JD; RincOn, 9..Louil, 2-0, ~.000 ,

O.lt.

I

•.

muxEOI1TS: Va!O!IIutlo, Loll -1!'1~
a; .Soto. Clnclnnlu, a ; cartton,

*·
Phl......,.w

a ;' GulllcUon, \ MO!troll,

J1 ; Rnn. HOUIIOn. li.

CAUJ'ORNIA ANGI!:LS- Opt!OIIed Tom
11n1n1no111 Olllllolder, 10 Stlt Lab of tho
l'ldltr

C.... ' -·

Called

Hanu, 11r11 ~..!!!""

StK

up J~

Loie.

NEW YORK Y~Acquittd Bar'.,. ,..,., catdlar, r....n the oo~o CU!Ior
fer Tom Filer, plldlot1 and ~ ,.....
clotodarnou111ol......

...

a

Television
VIeWing.
t

BY SCO'IT WOLFE
MERCERVILLE - The Southern
Tornadoes palced 17 men in the
lineup, scored 15 runS, and pounded
out 15 hits enroute to a lopsided 1&gt;2
win over SV ACfoe Hannan Trace at
MercerviJle Monda)( evenin!J..
Southern is now 9-4 overall and 6-2 m
theSVAC.
Southern's southpaw, Kent Wolfe,
got the start and picked up the win in
five innings of work before getting
relieved by Mike Collins. Wolfe fan·
ned four and walked just one in the
workout. Mike Collins came on in the
sixth and did an outstanding job,
striking out three and walking one in
just two innings of work. Jay Rees
was the duo's batterymate. K.
Petrie suffered the loss, but was
relieved by Greb Webb, and Brwnfield in the fifth and sixth innings

respectively. They combined for five
strike outs and six walks.
After two complete innlngs it was
a scoreless deadlock, and after three
the score wsa 2-1 Southern's favor.
In the fifth and sixth innings
Southern really broke the game
open, batting around both times.
Singles by McNickle, Pape, Teaford,
B. Wolfe, and Cardone, sandwiched
around a walk to Rees, and a Kent
Wolfe triple produced six runs in the
fifth. In the sixth K. Wolfe,. Bryan
Wolfe, Teaford, Beegle, and Lee
singled, while Rees, Cardone, and
Hemsley walked to put five more
runs on the score board for
Southern.
Southern hitters were Kent Wolfe
with a triple and single, Terry McNickle two singles, Bryan Wolfe two

ca reer.
Seaver, despite his record, is
hea lthY fOr the f'IrSt t'une thiS Sprmg
·
since he came to the Reds from the
New York Mets in 1978.
"The first year I was here (1979),
he pulled a calf muscle and got the
nu, " said Reds pitching coach Bill
Fischer on Monday, an off day.
"Last year, he h'.lrt his side, his
hip and had the flu. His shoulder
bothered him from the beginning of
the year. This year is the first year
he's been healthy.
"I think this year he was bound
and determined to get off to a good

Eastern, Southern battle for top spot

Ct\1T J&lt;~.n:.K rr F 'bJ 111.\fel.l'T
IT.~~~~..

IF 'btJ ~ 'tV UX!I&lt; ro
il.l$T!!,\O ~AD, I !RiatEl rr.

~UXIQ'~(.. ~ 01~

\OIU.. f.Ui&gt; -retJ '(FMiS 10

7:30

Both have 6-2 league records,

Wednesday at 4:30 p.m. the
Southern Tornadoes will square off,
against Eastern's Eagles in a key ·
SVAC High school baseball ·game.
Both Eastern and Southern are

• --while Eastern is 13-3 andoouthern94 overall. The game will be on Wednesday , April 29, not on April28 as
some printed schedules in the area

other league game scheduled.

County and Southern travels to
Alexander.

seeded
Rollinson of South
Africa, Susan
upsetLeesixth-seeded
Billie
Jean King 7-6, 11-3 in first-round action in the $2oo,ooo Unifed Airlines
Tournament of Champions.
Rollinson, 19, is ranked !12th in the
world, while King is No.14.
· In the other first-round match
,Grenelefe Golf and Tennis Resort
Leslie · Allen' defeated Betsy'
Nage~ ~. 6-2, 11-,1; Ann KJyomura
ousted Marie Pinterova of
- Czechoslovaltia, 6-4, 7-6; Claudia
Kohde of West Gennany, beat
Auatralla's Susan Leo &amp;-2, 7-8; !vall'
na Madruga Of Argentina, downed
West German Iris Riedel Kuhn &amp;-2,
~; and Bonnie Gadusek defeated
Pam Casale 6-4, 7-6.

WILL l!OAR[l

IMMEDIATELY.

PER/W'!i.IJM .. IT
I'IWl!E l!ETm
IFHE
IT

~~~::;:.::;JJ

to:

"·YES, YOOii: ••ER..

IS

•2710

·

IGANBIK
V) I '

rnem
NBCNEws
C1J BOB NEWHART
SHOW

IWANEDDt

~ _

•

THE
IHSTALLATI ON
NO'/i ...

1_..A
•

"- .A

ANIMALS
liD LILIAS, YOGAAND YOU
1121m ABC NEWS
CIJ CBN UPDATE NEWS
CIJ e PIIIIIIAOAZINE
(])
PROORAIIIIJNO
UNANNOUNCED
CIJ ~LL IN THE FAIIJILY
&lt;IJ IIJia FAMILY FEUD
(1) TV HONOR SOCIETY
CJ(l) TIC TAC DOUGH
I]) lfil
MACNEIL-LEHRER
REPORT
®l NEWS
CIJ e BULLSEYE
(])SUPERSPIESUsingspeclal

•

form the Su!J&gt;rise answer, as sug.
gestadbytheabovecartoon.

: IT'S ALL THE

"r 11 x r r x1 )
(Answers tomorrow)

Jumbles' CHALK JEWEL BEETLE WEDGED

t esterday·s
I

Answer : Posses sions that miQhl be acquired by
playing arou nd with th e law-"WEALTH "

Jumble Book No. 16, containing 1 ~ 0 puzzlta, Ia IYIIIIblt tor $1.75 poetpJICI
trom Jumblt, do !hie-newspaper, Box :W, Norwood, N.J. 016'8. lrlc:kldl your
namt~, addrHS, lip code end make checka paylbll to NtwtPiperbaoltl.

-_•Playing the percentages ·
By Oswald Jacoby
, and Alan Sontag

(BeP,!a!l
.
D W®I IT'S MAGIC, CHARLIE BROWN Lu cyis up in the air,
Cha rlie Brown becomu the
man wh o wa sn't there, an d
Wo odstoc k gets a big head
whefl Sn oopy , as the Greal
Houndlni , puts on a magic exhibition tor the Peanuts gang .

NOVA 'Life on a Silken

Thread ' Si nister , sometimes
dead ly, spiders have lillie
popular appeal : yet their aitken
webs are am ong nature's
loveliest cre ations. Seen in clo·
seup and a low motion, epldera
reveal a delicate gra ce and
beauty . (60 mina.)

lfil SMITHSONIAN SPECIAL

8:30 (]) GOOD NEWS

(]) MOVIE -{ADVENTURE) •"
"Black StoJNon" 1V711
LA VERNEANOSIIR·

1

NORTH

If today's hand were played
in a duplicate game almost
every North-South pair would
play in six notrump which is a
cinch.
All decl~ rer needs is to get
three spade tricks and there is
no way to stop him. All expert
declarers will make seven
because they will play the
spades by leading toward
· dummy and finessing the 10.
The 10 will hold. They will
cash the king, come to their
hand to lead the ace and hav e
a fourth spade trick when the
queen drops.
This is a well-known per·
centage play. II declarer
leads the 10 after cashing
dummy's lting he will have no
play for lour spade tricks
because if East holds the
queen he will cover and
: someone's fourth S{lade w11l
eventually be a wmner 01
course, the queen might fall
singleton, but that chance is
far less than the chance that
West will hold Q x or Q x x.
The hand is interesting as a
bidding problem als o.
Although South has a balanced
16 high-card points, he should
really open one club. The bidding will still develop easily
lor him and after that club

Beth rece ives a long distance
marriage prop o&amp;al from Ritchie
who)a stat ioned in Greenland ,
and t.Aari on becomes a ,contestant on a TV game show to win
the money fo r Lori Beth 's trip .

(l)

.

1-11..---"'

1-'-.:..;-J.::...;,V;:::,;'J:;:.:=-+..,..Jl'T"'...,I No" arrange lhe circled loners to

(]) HERITAGE SINGERS
CIJ IIJie HAPPY DAYS Lori

IHSPECTI~6

I I

t

~ :=~:~:R~TS
.
OVER EASY Guest: Con-

vertently Inv olves his leli a.,.
lawmen in a charily swindle
masterminded by a b eautiful
Oriental woman whos e body·
guard is a black belt karate ace
anxious to practice his skilla·on
the reluctant Peric;ina. (60
mins.)

"6UEST" HAG ARR IYE[l,
SAHIB 1/AR.BOCH.S. HE

X)

1::.-4:&gt;.-.:l.......l._ L___j

(1) HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
l])lllJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
@) MATCH GAllE
IIJIID FACE THE MUSIC
7:18 (]) CBN UPDATE NEWS
'B:OO (I)8 CZJ LOBOPerklnolnad

VER.Y60011. l'o£

(

4-U-Il

+K 10

YA Q 10
t AK S I
+QJ 9 2

WEST
+ Q84

EAST
• 916 5

• 863

.971 2
• 10 8 1
• 83

• QJ 6 3
+ 65 4

SOUTH
+AJ 3 2
• KJ 5

• '2

+A K101
Vul nerable: Neither
Dealer: South
Wesi Nortb East

Sototb

Pass

I NT
Pass

6 NT

Pass

Pass

Opening lead:+Q

opening there os a good chance
to reach seven clubs which is
easy to make.
All declarer has to do in
clubs is to ruff two diamonds
in his hand or two spades in
dummy to wind up with six ·
trumps, two spades, three
hearts and two diamonds.

(l)I JI.

LEY Bedlam erupts when
Laverne and Shir1ey and Lenny
and Squiggy, giVe their own
separate 1 versions, in flash·
ba ck, explaining the night they
spent as hu abandaand wi vea in
a motel room on their trek rrom
Milwaukee to Los Angeles.
(Repeat)

~"UJI"Otr(

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 "Essays of
1- Uly
..
5 Peculation 40 Insects
10 Sblrley
41 Valley
Temple's t l. DOWN
11 Detonation I ~naive fur
13 French
z Wading bird
cheese
3 Influence
14 Ingress
4 Mining find
15 Author
5 "The Third
Ye~terday'a Auwer
Deighton
. Man" author 19 Boggy
%'1 Graphs
ll Hanoi
1 French
Z2 Buddhist
Z9 Perfume
holiday
81Uluity
language
30 Spectral
17 Initiated
7 Ukely
Z3 "Porgy and 31 Fortifi·
(poet.)
8 Finally
Bess" role
cation
18 Ught fabric 9 Foot lever
24 Joining
:Ia Soprano
%8 Singular
12 Presley's
forces
Tassinari
Z1 Employ
"Love Me -" Z5 Q-osby
37 Seek
Z2 Word with II Elhaust
of comedy
alms
Oag or cat
Z3 Accumulate 6-+-+-+-

CJ C1J PUFF THE MAGIC
DRAGON An anima ted spe cial

based o n P e t ~r Yarr ow' s hit
song about a magic dragon who
helps a young boy lind the cour·
age he need s to race growing

Member : The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and the Amerie&amp;n
Newspaper Publlahers Allaoclation, National
Advertising Repres~ntaUve, Branham
Newspaper SaleJJ, 733 11Urd Avenue, New.
York, NewYork 10017.

'!!!· IRapeat)
Ml THE TWO OF US Nan and
Brentwood are in for a big aurpriae wh en, ea ch think ing the
other is out ol town. they both
return home to r weekend
rendezvous .

PIJ5TMASTER; Send address to The Dolly
Sentinel, 111Court St., Pt»neroy, Ohlo0769.

8:58 (]) CBN UPDATE NEWS

SUBSCRII'fiON RATES

11:00

By Carrier Dr Motor Route

CIJG CD HILLSTREETBLUES
In an uproar over the lack of
poliuprotect ion and an alarm ing crime wave, the local merchantatakethlngsintothelrown
hand a by becoming vigilantes
and working over a young thief
that they cat ch. (Repeat; 60
min a.)

One week ....................... .. . 11.00
One Mllllill .......................... 14.10
One Year ........... .. ............ 152.10
SINGLE COPY

PRICES

O.Uy ................... .. ..... IIC.Ois

Sobocribers not desiring lo pay tho carrier
may remlt In advance direct t() The O.lly

Cil 700CLUB
CIJIIJieTHREE;SCOIIPANY

Sentinel on a 3, 6or 12 monill boola. Cl'edlt.
wjUbe Jlivon carrier each mooth.
No ! Ubocriptl0f1!1 by rnaU pennltled In town.

zs George

A hilarioua c asa ol mlalaken

Identity Ianda Jack an imprea·
aivechet'a poet that makeahlm
the unw~tlng target of a bullying
bookie, acuckolded huaband,a
vengeful vegetable cook and
the
locel
pollee.

IIIAIL 8Uil8CRIPTIONS

Ollltud WetiVIrllala
IMmth .... · .. .. .. · .......... .. .. hD.Io
Six...,lh ...._................. .. . 111.111 .
I Year ....... .... ·. ...... ....... .. P!.OII•
RaleiO.toldeOIIIt
udWootVIrllala
·'
! Monlh .. ..................... ... 1n.oo:
1Mllllill .. · .... · ........ · •· .. .. .. · 111.011

(Qioatd·C.ptloned)
8 C1J (!D) CBS TUESDAY
NIGHT MOVIE 'We're Fighting
Back' 1981 Stara: Kevin
Matlo!l, Paul M cCrane.

011

CIJ(j) IIYITERYI 'Sorgoanl
Cribb, Part II: Som~thlng Did,

.

Something Hew' When aging
Henry Rueaellllna lly married,
hie young bride wore 1 HCond·
harld wedding gown . lnltlal~ intrigued by thla romance , 8er·
1
geant Cribb begina to auapec:t
'

HE SPILT
. MUSTARD

AU OVER
MVTASLE·
CLOTH

..

~n111171 ' .
8"13 ·

\

(l) Q (l) 'JOKER'S WILD

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;~~

' .

-

(jj)

animation, film footage and still
phot ograph s, this special ell·
pl ores the car eers of history' a
greatest&amp; pies:Mat aHari, Francia Gary Powers, Klaus Fuchp.
and others .
(I) BASEBALL Atlanta Bravel!l
vs Houatop, As tros

::t:~~~~~ r~: !~j:. ~: re;~ght Eastern travels to Vinton ~=tY:•:':":":":":":"~"::"::":"·:..:..:..:..:· :;~~-========~

HAINES CITY, Fla. (AP ) - Un-

~I

.:.1 "'-

where home can1er service il available.

Billie King upset

'

8:58
7:00

Two-hour delay, folks

~ .::~~-- ·-· ··"''"'

(l) ANOY GRIFFITH
CJ(l)®l CBS NEWS
(l) WILD WILD WORLD OF

,--------------------r-------------------

' I

of his

DAlLAS (AP) - Brian GotUried
coasted past Sammy Glammalva a
. .
,
lalt-rrunute 111bstitute . for the injured Yannick Noah 7 • • • "1 in.
• "'• "" "'
..the quarterfinals 9f the World ChampiOIIIhip of Tennis.

a:30

ACTION 1:_.,~

by Henri Arnold and So!&gt; Lee

-'IOiff:
I -r I- .I

.oreasman Claude Pepper.
Hoal: Hugh Downs. (Cioaed·
Captioned; U.S.A.)

YOU 115T 1 CANI AND
T&amp;~L TH! POLl C! COMMit,fJON!R IN CALeAII.Y
I r1EMAHP PMMPT

•

st.art. He feels for us to win, he's got
"We should be winning with the
to pitch well. If he tlirows the bali lund of pitching we've been getting,"
like he did in Houston, he can put ~id Howard, whose staff has
together a streak real quick."
~owed only 12 earned runs in the
Fischer thinks Seaver will get bet· last six games.
·
teras the season gets warmer.
"We're just not hitting. We just
"The arm will get stronger and the qan't sus~in a rally. ! might have to
ball will go faster as the year goes make some changes," said Howard.
on," Fischer said.
The Padres' first four hitters Padres Manager Frank Howard ·Gene Richards, Olzie Smith, Rupindicated he may make some lineup pert Jones and Randy Bass - are
changes during the series because Of • batting .191, .200, .185 and .204
poor hitting and a S-11 record.
respectively.

t .

!CONTINUED
FROM
DAYTI!IE)
CIJ CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS Ouest:Neil Sedaka.

~UF£!

A"two-man team· scramble" will · balls of golfer's choice and the lucky
be the type 18 hole tourney to tee off "highest scorer" recorded gets a
at I p.m. Thursday, May 21, at the prize not yet announced.
local Jay-Mar Golf Course.
Thsoe who participated in this golf
Goals are multiple as local golfers "first" in Meigs County will start
vie for wirmers' crowns with all with the shot Of 11 gJUl and it is hoped
proceeds going to the Meigs Chapter that ,ali competitiye golfers in the
of the American Heart Association. area will take the;afternoon off and
There is a $10 fee which includes play. While taking part in your ,
greens fee. Those interested can favorite §port you will be con·
sign up as individuals or pick their tributing much needed financial.
own foursome ... call 98&gt;4270 (Lois assistance to cUrtail the No. I killer
Kelly), 992-2.'170 (Nancy Reed) or in the county and country - ·Car992-7680 (Marion Crawford )..
. diovascular disease.
The winning two-man team will
win first prize of wind breakers ;
longest driver will add a golf urth Wellston to host
brella to his golf bag; Closest to pin
at seventh hole acquires a dozen golf softball tourney
..
WEW&gt;TON - The Wellston City
singles, and Dale Teaford with two .
Recreation Department will sponsor
singles for u\e Tornadoes of Coach
a Men's Class A and B softball tourHilton Wolfe, Jr. and Coach Howie Player of week
nament on May 2 and 3.
Caldwell. Jay Rees added a double,
Entry fee is $60 and two (2) soft·
NEW YORK (AP) - Ken balls.
Zane Beegle singled, Jeff Sopher
singled, Allen Pape singled, and Bob Singleton of the Baltimore Orioles
Individual trophies will be awarLee, Joe Bob Hemsley added was named the American League ded to the first and 8eCOIId place
Player of the Week.
singled.
teams with trophies going to the top
The switch-hitting outfielder went · four teams.
For Hannan Trace Toby Sheets
singled, Petrie singied, M. beaver lll-for-18last week and hit .556 in five
The drawing will be Wednesday,
doubled and singled, Waugh singled, games. He accumulated 24 total April 29, 6 p.m., at the Wellston city
bases, inchiding two doubles and park. For further detaUs, call Ron
and Bays singled for the Wildcats.
four
homers. Singleton drove in nine Hudson at :JM.3058 or Bill Mahle at
Southern travels to Alexander
runs
and scored six.
tonight and to Eastern on Wed384-3825.
nesday.
Linescore :
Southern
002 265 ()-15 15 3
The Daily Sentinel
HT
001 000 1- 2 2 3
!USPS 115-. .)
Batteries: K. Wolfe (WP) , Collins
ADlvllloa o!Milillllledla, IDe.
6th, and Rees. Petrie (LP), Webb
Publil!hed ~e ry afte rnoon, Monday thmigh
5th, Brumfield 6th and Waugh.
Friday, 111 Cow1 Stnel, by the Ohio Valley

to improve home ......_,14..1.

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one lener 10 eacr, square. to form
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Publl.!hlng Company • MlliUJnedla, Inc., ·
Pomeroy, Oh.io ~789, 992-2151!. Second clua
~~ ge paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

R ed s hope

J1ftli~ IDit ~THATSCAAMaLIDWORDQAME

APA. 2a,,eat
EVENING
,8:1!0 CIJ • m e m ®I 1121 •

Golf tournament
scheduled May 21

and a ground out.
Eagle hitters were John Beaver
with three singles, Greg Wigal two
singles, ~ne Cole a triple, Mike
Bissell a double and two singles, and
Rob Smith a single.
For Southwestern Scott Russell
singled and doubled, Wayne
Sizemore singled twice, Newberry
doubled, Gilbert singled, and
kessenger singled.
Eastern travels to Vinton County
today, then hosts Southern in the an·
nual SVAC showdown Wednesday.
Llnescore :
320 100 2-3 10 5
Eastern
SW
002 012 0--5 8 I

Southern baseballers In
15-2 win over Wildcats

Gottfried coasts
\ in quarterfinals

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MINFORD ..:. The ,t,J' lgs Local and sela new J,nvt~noi.l~Pd IChoOi
Marauders' ~)s,trac¥ team too)! record Of 52.6 secoods in the 400
rwmer-up honors at the 15 team Min-, meter,.relay. The relay .team conford Invitational track~ receD- , Slsts of Pauls Swisher, Lori R11pe, ' Uy, scoring several big wi)\8 and set· Andrea Riggi, and Shari'Drebel. •
ling several new recon!S. Meigs
Meigs took BeC01J!1 _in the 800 meter
placed second behind pow~r{ul relay with 11 t4ne of 1:52:5 minutes .
Waverly whO claimed a· big win at----Relay tespJ members are _Paula
the meet. Team Scoring was sifuher, Vicky DeBord, Andrea
Waverly with 104 points, Meigs 52, Riggs, and Shari Drebel. The quar·Portsmouth Notte Dame 48, tet of Laura Smith, KriBUn AnLucasville Yalley 40, Jackson 41, derson, Renee WUlis, and Kathy
Wheelersburg 54, Huntington Ross Dean placed third, but set a new
34, Minford 25, Oak Hlll 20, Ports- · schoolrecordofll :00:9mlnutes.
mouth 11, Pike Eastern 9, . Pike
Pa\lla Swisher and Vicky DeBord
Western 8, Green 7. North Adams 0, both broketheoldschoolrecordof 15
and Portsmouth East with 0 points.
feet nine and a hall inches in the long
.Ovenill Meigs girls bro~e two in· jump. Pauls•Swlsbef ,was lh,lrd with .
vitational records and five school · a 16 feet three and three-fourtha inrecords as they conUnued to be one ches jump and Vicky DeBord placed e
Of the top teams in Southeastern fl(th with a 16 foot jump.
·
Ohio. Besides the record-breaking
Laur.a Smith placed third in the
performances, consistency , and discos, Ill? feet 6~ inches; Shari
overall team effort again provided Drehel placed fourth in the 100
anertrapunchfortheMarauders.
meters with a time of 13.4 secol)ds;
Andrea Riggs won the high jump and Kim Fraley set a new school
with an Invi~tional and school record in the 100 meter hurdles with
record leap of 5 feet 4 inches. The atimeofl7.9seconds.
Meigs Relay team claimed victory

edge Highlanders,
••
remazn tied for top spot

CINCINNATI (AP I _ The CiDcinnati Reds, 1-4 at home this
Oakland, 1: Paciorek,. Seattle, I.
season 1 are hoping to turn thin••
PJTCHlNG (2 DeciSions ): Keough, Oek•
•
b""
land, «1 , 1.1100. 1.00: M. Norris, Oakland, around tomght agamst the San
«~. 1.1100, LM ; ~'-r"h · California, l-&lt;1, Diego Padres with Tom Seaver ll-2
um. 2.84 : Hoyt, Ch1cago, 3-0. UXXI, 1.59:
.
, ,
.
'
,
Wait.s, Cleveland, l&lt;l, 1.1100, 1.00: Lerch, looking for his f1rst Victory and 247th
cago, 2-0, l.IXKI, 3.03; Kingma n, Oakland,
~. 1.1100. o.6J.

Meigs hitters were led by hard·
hitting Jerry Fields, who slammed a
home · run and two singles, John
Cremeans a double and single, and
Roger Kovalchik two singles. Terry
Way~nd ,hammei-ed
home run,
arid Mike Miller, Jeff Wayland, Troy
Brooks, and Jim Boyer singled.
Coach Harrison praised his club
for lts good defensive play and its
performance at the plate.
Meigs plays a reserve game
today, then meets Waverly on Wednesdi!y and ,Gallipolis on Thursdsy.
Meigs begins sectional play Satur·
day against Sheridan.
Llnescore:
Meigs
012 12.'1 ()-9 12 2
Jackson
002 000 ()-2 10 1
Batteries - Wayland (WP) and T.
Wayland, R. Murray 7th. Luster
(LP), Woods, and Fouty. HR -,
Fields. and T. Wayland, Meigs.
Collins, Jackson.

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Tuesgay, Apr1128, 1981

•

LAFF- A- DAY

Alfred UMW hears report on .Mexico
I

I

'

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I

A rwort on Mexico, a coUI)try of
the Jery rich and the very poor,
whery people continually struggle
for equality, was given by Florence
Ann Spencer at the r~nt meeting
of the Allred United M~thodist
Women held at the church.
·
Afs!Spencernoiedthatmostofthe
SpanlsD-Indian and Indian people
are &lt;;atholics with only 50,000 being
reported as Methodists. · Nellie
Parker led the F;aster program, "A
Twentieth Century Emmaus Walk",

with all members taking part in ters were read · from Kate
readings aild sharing thoUghts on Rodehaver and Emma lAm Finch
the meaning of Easter. Martha with Ms. Rodehaver extending an inElllot read ~ripture ·from Luke.
vitation to send recipes for a cookThe program closed with group book being prepared by the Ladies
singing of "Were You There?", Auxillary of the Lake Worth Church
"Christ Arose" and the doxology.
of God. Cookbdoks are to be ordered
The meeting bpened with prayer · before August.
and group singing of several songs · · Friendship cards were signed for
with Ms. Spencer at the piano.
Helen Woode, Afs. Finch, and Ms.
Janice Pullins reported on the sale Rodehaver. Osie Mae Follrod had
of vanilla and greeting cards. Let- the prayer calendar and coose

Florence E. Walter, medical
missionary In Nigeria, to whom the
society will send a birthday card.
Janet Moore aerved cake and ice
cream. The table featured an
Easter motif \lrith a ~ cloth and
napkins and a white C&amp;ndle. Otberl
attending were Clara Follrod,
Genevieve (;uthrie, Nln8 RobinBon,
8l)d Armie Thompson. Next meeting
will be at he oome of Ms. Spencer
with Osie Mae Follrod to have the
program.

'Hill Street Blues'-- NBC 'done good' of April UMW meeting:
Resurrection topic

LOS ANGELES (AP )
Somewhere, " United States" · is
smiling. " The Associates" is
avenged. " Paper Chase" is enjoying
a vicarious victory. Is there a canceled-TV-show heaven? If so, hosan~ringout.

REMARKABLE FERNANCO - Los Angeles Dodgers pilcher Fernando Valenzuela, sensatiooal rook.le left bander, tips his hat to the sold
out [lodger stadium after hurling his fourth shutout of the season and !Hth
straight completed game victory as he blanked the Sao Fr-.oclsco Giants
$-GMuoday.I AP Laserphoto) .

':Hlll Street Blues" has been
saved. NBC, you done good.
Despite horrible ratings, a brutal
tiljle period and the label of critics'
darling - the kiss of death in
television - "Hill Street Blues," a
series that deserves to live, is going
to, NBC gave Mary Tyler Moore
PFoductions a renewal on the show,
which means ·that it will have at
least 13 chances next fall to woo
vl~wers .

1This time, the good guys might
win.
When a producer of a go&lt;)d

tel.evision show says, "It just hasn't
found its audience," he's usually
copping an excuse for failure. But
when Grant Tinker, MTM chief employs the phrase regarding "Hill
Street," it rings true.
NBC is only just now giving the
show. a real $hot on the schedule,
moving its repeats fr&lt;m Saturday
night + 1\flere any comer was murdered by ABC's "Love Boat""Fantasy Island" tandem + to
Tuesdays, where it wiU probably
land next fall , too.
Fred Silverman and his chief
programmer aren't being altrustic
here; "Hill Street" isn't just goOd
TV, it's commercial TV. The downbeat elements to this realistic cop
show are c~refully tempered by
characters and situations of such
breadth and simple comic appeal

LA rookie in
another shutout
LOS ANGLES IAPJ - It was a
World Series atmosphere that gri!}ped Dodger Stadium. Fans were
arriving as ea rly as three hours
before the game and more than 100
members of the media were on hand
to wii ness the latest performance of
the remarkable Fernando Valenzuela .
So where was Valenzuela, the
rookie Los Angeles left-bander,
while all this was going on Monday
night ?
" He's getting up for the game, all
right, " said Dodger shortstop Bill
Russell. "He's in there on the
trainer's table, sound asleep."
The 20-year-old Valenzuela was
wide awake a little later as he continued his incredible performance
on the mound and at the pla te.
Valenzuela shut out the San Francisco Giants 5-(), allowing seven hits.
Philadelphia trirruned Montreal 31 in the only other National League
game Monday night.
Valenzuela has started five games
in his brief maj or league career and
won them all , four via shutout, and
in 45 innings this year, he has
allowed only one earned run .
Monday night's performa nce
lowered his earned run average to
0.20. With his third straight shutout,
he has a string of 28 1-3 scoreless innings.
" Webster has no words to define
him," said Los Angeles second
baseman Dave Lopes, who helped
the preserve Valenzuela's latest
shutout with a running, over-thesh&lt;lulder catch of a fly ball in the
second inning when the Giants had
runnersatfirstand third a nd nobody
out.
The crowd of 49,478 accorded
Valenzuela numerous standing
ovations, on the mound as he strung
out one shutout inning after another,
and at the plate, where he collected
three of the Dodgers' 11 hits and also

knocked in the game's first run.
" He's entitled to all that acclaim,"
sa1d Lopes. " He's done things no one
else has done. He's a star. He owns
the city right now. He's a super kid
and a great pitcher."
San Francisco Manager Frank
Robinson, referring to Valenzuela's
darting screwball, said, "He throws
a pitch you don 't see too often, and
when you do see it, you don't know
what to do with it."
San Francisco outfielder Jerry
Martin, who had two of the Giants'
seven hits, said, " He has more poise
than any 20-year-old I've ever seen
- tha t is , if he really is 20."
Afterward, Valenzuela, through
an interpreter, said, " I feel great, no
I wasn't tired, I went to my
screwball .more toward the end of
the game."
On his hitting (he's batting .438 for
the season with seven hits in 16 atbats ), Valenzuela laughed and said,
" No, I've never been a good hitter.
But ! like to hit, and Itry to hit well."
He singled in the third inning but
eventua lly was thrown out at the
plate after Ken Landreaux had
singled to center.
In the fourth, the Dodgers finally
got to loser Tom Griffin, 1-2, after
the San Francisco right-hander had
retired the first two batters in the inning. Mike Sciascia and Bill Russell
singled, and Valenzuela promptly
shot a base hit to right to drive in the
first run, the second game in a row
in which he has provided the gamewinning RBI.
Lopes followed with a run-scoring
sing le and Landreaux singled home
two more runs.
Valenzuela left two Giants on base
in each of the fi rst two innings, two
more in the fourth and it wasn't until
the seventh before he retired the
side in order. He struc~ out seven to
improve his National Leagueleading strikeout total to 4J.

Pomeroy Personals

NAMED U. S. CHEERLEADER AWARD WINNER - Wendy EiklDB
has been named a United States Cheerleader Award W~er for 1981. Sbe .
was nominated by the Eastern High School deerleader spo111or, Nancy
Larklos, for this oatlooal award. The United StStes Achievement
Academy winners are selected upon the excllllilve re~ommeodatioos of
the cheerleader spoMor and the oflleial standards for seleetioJU set forth
by the academy. The criteria for sel~tioo Includes cbeerleadlng ahDity,
sportsmanship, citllensblp, leadenhlp, academics, !llDthuslasm, poise
and projecliOJI. persooal grooming, alleodaoce, attltu~e and cooperative
spirit. Wendy is the daughter of David and Judy Elkins and the granddaughter of Mn. Flora Elk.los of Rockledge, Fla.
:

Today's

Sports World
By WW Grimlley
AP Corr.. poadent
Priorities. It all comes down · to
priorities.
If Isiah Thomas had grown up
passing a football instead of a
basketball, his prospects for instant
wealth at age 19 would have been
greatly diminished.
And if Herschel Walker could slam
dunk as well as he can go off tackle,
he would be counting the days to

June 9 - draft day in the National
Basketball Association - the way
Indiana's lsiah is right now.
Priorities, indeed.
Thomas declared for the NBA
In other AL action it was
Baltimore 5, Chicago 2·; 'Seattle 8 draft along with DePaul's Mark
Minnesota 3 in 10 innings; Texas 10: Aguirre and Buck Williams of
Boston 0; New York 3, Detroit 1 and Maryland the other day, The ab· Milwaukee 4, Tororlto3 in 12 innings sence of a degree will not interfere
Right-hander Ken Forsch, ~. pit~ with their draft eligibility and all
ched a three-hitter to stop a six- three are likely first-round selecgame Oakland winning streak. At 17- lions when the NBA divides up the
2, the A's are,one victory short of the country's best college baaketball
major league record for most vic- talent in aoout six weeks. Diplomas
. tories in April.
.
are low priorities in this draft.
But Georgia's Walker, woo may
Steve McCatty, 3-1, was the loser
hut pitched his fourth complet~ very well be the best coUege football
game and the 16th of the year for the player in America, sat on the
A'sstaff.
sidelines today, inell~lble for selec-

'

Federal suit filed
PITTSBURGH (AP) - A federal
suit seeking to stop the city of New
Orleans and the Louisiana Superdome from luring the Pirate
baseball team from Pittsburgh was
filed by Mayor Richard Caligulri.
The Pirates, clalrning they've lost
Jl milllon since moving into Three
Riv,ers Stadium in 1970, are suing the ·
stadium ·authority to nullify their
lease, which hu 30 years to run, At
Issue i8 a dispute' over woo \1rill pay
for an eltlrnaled ·$2 million to S3
million in stadium repairs and road
impruvemenla which the Pirates say
tlie city lliUJ failed tu ~de.

Public Notice
NOTICE .
The

Racine

Pomona Grange to meet
The Meigs County Pomona
Grange will meet at 8 p.m. Friday at
the Rock Springs Grange hall \lrith
membe~s of the Rock Springs
grange to serve refreshments. The
stale sewing contest entries will be
judged.
·

To meet at church ·

Angels stop Athletics, 3-2 .
By KEN RAPPOPORT
AP Sports Writer
The way April has been going for
Don Baylor, he'll take any kind of a
hard-hit ball - even if it does result
in a triple play.
Of course, he felt much better after hitting a home run as well Monday night.
" I've just been playing to get in a
frame of mind where I could hit the
ball good," he said after leading his
California Angels to a 3-2 victory
over the red-hot Oakland A's. " I
haven't been a ble to do it all spring,
but tonight I've had four good atbats."
One of Baylor's four har d-hit halls
was turned. into a triple play in the
sixth inning by the A's, thrilling a
half-price night crowd of 41 ,760 at
the Oakland Coliseum. But earlier,
Baylor - who went into the game
batting a paltry .008 - also had a
sacrifice fly for his first RBI of the
aeason and a tie-break.lng home run.
"That's the first time this aeason
he's swung the bat like I know he can
swing the bat," said California
Manager Jim Fregosi of Baylor, the
American League's Most Valuable
plllyer two years ago.
Incidentally, it ' was only the ·
aecond loss in 19 games this season
for the West Divilion-leading A's.

that success seems inevitable.
"The Resurrection" was the topic
Thai's the difference between this
for the April meeting of the Forest
show and other worthies that have
Run United Methodist Women held
vanished from"network schedules afat the horne of Mrs. Mae Holter with
ter lighting fires In the eyes of critics
Mrs. Evelyn Hollon as co-hostess.
and programmers bui ieaving
The group sang "Christ Arose':
Nielsen families cold.
followed by scripture from I Cortn:
Tinker and his producers have
thians 15. Readings on the resurrec,ideas to make "Hill Street" even
tion were given .by Mrs. Kathleen
more accessible without blunting its
Scott, Mrs. Nancy Merriflelq, Mrs.
edge. For one thing, they might lose · Mse Holter, Mrs. Evelyn Hollon,
that Innovative method of
Mrs. Edith Sisson, Mrs. Ann Watson,
storytelllog that strings some .plots . Mrs. Faye Hamllton, Mrs. Naomi
through several episodes. That's an
Wyatt, and Mrs. Mary Nease. Group
experiment to he worked from a
singing of "He Lives" and prayer·by
position of success.
Mrs. Yeauger closed the program.
"I'm delighted," says Tinker,
Mrs. Leah Nease gave a talk on
"it's not been the biggest ratings
"The Old Rugged Cross" and the life
winner to date - or, as we like to
of the composer, the Rev. George
say, 'It hasn'tfound its audience yet'
Bernard. ixty-one sick calls were
- but NBC clearly has faith that it
reported. Mrs. Nease announced a·
will,II
May 14 meeting to be held at the
Cheers to NBCfor that.
Syracuse chllrch. A dessert course
was served to the 13 members at·
tending.

Mrs. Carol McLaughlin has returned from Hampton, Va. after spending a week here with her son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Duane McLaughlin, and children.
The McLaughlin family accompanied his mother home and
then returned to VIrginia )'.1onday.
Saturday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth McLaughlin and family
were Alan and Marilyn McLaughlin,
Fostoria.
Recent visitorli of Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Knight were Mr. and Mrs.
Terry Knight and son, Steve,
Caledonia. The birthday of Terry
was observed during their visit here.
Miss Helen Loehary . is
recuperating at her High Street
home following surgery at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

lion in the National Football League
draft. Sorry kid, wrong sport.
Hurryin' He(schel will just have to
wait awhil~ before claiming his
share of the All-American dollar
because he is $till three years away
from the comPletion of his collegiate
eligibility.
But what albout the All-Canadian
dollar?

Members of Trinity Church,
Pomeroy, are asked to meet at the
church at 5:30 p.m. Thursday to
assist with making lee cream for the
social to be h"eld Saturday beginning
at 3 p.m. Those coming to Thursday
night's work session are asked to
take hand mixers and mixing bowls.

Free clothing day set
Free clothing day will be held at
The Salvation Army, Pomeroy, on
Thursday, April30, from 10 a.m unWnoon. All area reslden!B in need of
clothing are welcome. ,

Weight loss news
Trophies \1rill be awarded to TOPS
" graduates" , it was decided at a
recent meeting of the TOPS OH S70
Club of Pomeroy.
Presided over by Mrs. Delores
Long, the members decided to purchase the trophies with the calorie
chart money and award them to
those achieving their weight goal.
Plans were made for an auction at
the May 5 meeting and members
were asked to contribute gifts for
that
Weekly queens at the paSt 'three
meetings were Mary Roush,
VIrginia Dean, and Doris Hensler,
aild the runners-up were Becky Hensler, Ala St. Clair, ~mice Dunt.
Delores Hawk was the queen for the
month of March and Wll$ recognized
during the meeting. Becky and
Doris Hensler were welcomed into
club membership, lnfonnation on
the club meetings may be obtained
by calling 992-741~.

UMW elects officers
Officers were elected at a recent
meeting of the Morning Star United
Methodist Church.
· They are Debbie Wolfe, lay
leader; Mildred lhle, administrative
board chalnnan; Dorothy Smith,
church school superintendent; Donna Thle, chairman of finance; Teresa
Rice, youth president; PauliiM!
Eynon, outreach chairman; Mildred
Ihle, Donna Rice and Dorothy
Smith, county eouncll represeD'
tative:

Family dinner Sunjay ·
A farnlly dinner was held Euler
Sunday at the home of Harold and
Vicki · Hanson, RuUand. · Attending
were Joann Clark, Evelyn Spencer:
Harry, Sherry, David, Carol and
Leigh King, Brent and Chad Hanaon:
An egg hunt was held for the·
chlldre~.

'

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Small investment,_large
retums, Sentinel Want Ads:

1--------.,---------r--------~------....J .i
Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notte•

IN THE
COURT OF
COMMO~ PLEAS,
MEIGS OUNTV,
0 10
.
Roger W. Do vis, et. ol.,
Pllintll, ,
·
LH lkl Guy W. LH,

.,

Home

Nati onal Bank, Raci ne,
Ohio, hereby gives notice
lila! 11 filed an application
with the Comptroller' of
Currency ,
requesting
authority to establ ish a
branch banking faci lity In
the Incorporated Village of
Syracuse, Ohio, on the
Westerly Side of Slate
ROI.lle 124, lmmedlai~IY
SOI.llh of the U. S. Post Of·
flee building. Tne facility
would be comprised of
walk·ln service with three
teller s1ations and a dri ve·
up window.
John T. Wolle,
.President,
Recine Home
National Bank
Racine, Ohlo4.5171
Apr il28, May 5

c~l 1o1. 21, 21 csi 1. 12, It,

Public Notice

ttc

1l

lnsur1nce

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Announcements

I PAY highest prices
possible lor gold and silver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc.
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.
Racine Volunteer Fire
Department sponsors a
shof gun &amp; rille match
every Sal. night 6:30 p.m.
at their building In Bashan.
Factory choke 12 guage
shot guns only. Open sights
22 rille.
IT'S BEELINE'S Show and
Tell Time! ill ! Our new
spring and summer line is
l)OW available and Is II un·

bellevablell !I Give us a
call tor more Information
about this Interesting work.
Phone 992 - 39~1from 9·6.

the poo l and recreation

r ings,

jewelry ,

silver

dollars, sterling, etc. Wood 32

Mobile Homes
lor Sate
ice bOxes, jars, antiques,
etc. complete households. 1913 Crown Haven, 14 x 65,
Write : M.O. Miller, Rf. 4,
bedjoo ms, new car·
Pomeroy, OH 4.5769. Or three
pel. 1911 Cameron, 14 x 60,
call 1'92·7760. ·
two bed rooms, new carpet.
1972 Champion, 12 x 60, two
New, used, and antique fur- bedrooms, new carpel. 1976
niture. No item to large or Ca meron, 12 x 60, two
to small. Wi ll buy one piece bedrooms, all electr ic. 1971
or complete households . Skyline, 12sx 6) , two
Marlin's Genera l Store at bedrooms, bath &amp; 1/J , new
992·6370.
carpel . 1970 PMC ,
12 x 60, two bedrooms, new
Now buying gold and carpet. B x S Sales, Inc.,
silver, old pocket watches, 2nd x Viand Street, Point
chains, diamonds, silver Pleasant, wv Phone 675·
money and coins. Martin's « 24.
General Store, Middleport.
992·6370.
4 acres with 2 bed room
trailer 70x14. 2 car ga rage,
Color TV !hal doesn' t work . 3 miles from Racine on Co.
Rd . 28. Belore12 noon or af·
992·203.4.
ter 5 p.m. 949·2618.
2 door upright beverage
8 x ~5 2 bedroom
mobile
cooler glass. Caii99H969.
home. Real good. $1 ,950.

Sleeping room s;

46
Space for Rent
COUNT.RY MOB I
1971 mobile home fQr sale. Park, Route 33,
$.4000.00. Must sel l at once. Pomeroy . Large 1
992·7479.'
992 ~ 3 724 .

Need Money? ·Need
Clothes? Why not gel your
wardrobe at no cost to YO\J
and earn exlia dollars too?
For Information or In·
lervlew appointment call
992·39~1 between 9-9.
'

Fashion Consultant needed
NOW I Ladles fashion firm .
Average $8.00 per hour.
4 beagle puppies. Great lor For appointment interview
childs pel. Approxl mate! y 9 call992-3941 between 9·9.
weeks old. 247·3.584.
Wanted. Share ride to
\Thr" month old black and Athens, hrs. 8-5. Mon.· Fri.
.While beautiful killen. Call 1'92-3390 ofler 6:30p.m.
'Housebroken. Give away to Kerrs Run area.
I100d home. 992-2531 .
Now taking appllcalions
lor lifeguards. Apply
weekends at Royal Oak
6
Lost and Found
Park.
LOST : Reddloh·brown
large purn containing FRI ENOL V Home Parlies
valuable papers &amp; money . now In our 26th year, Is ex·
Lost arO\Jnd vltlnlty of paneling to your area, and
Jones Boys. Edith Teaford. has apenlngs lor managers
Reward. 992-2253.
ond dealers. Party plan ex•
perience helpful. Car &amp;
SMALL young" miniature phone necessary . Call
collie wearino 1111 collar &amp; Carol Day toilet! 518·489·
draoglng long chain. Found 839S.
near Vtterens. 742·2133.
Part limo help wonted
Found : Linda star ring at teach lng macrame,
Vaughan's Cardinal. 1'92· needlepoint, rug hooking,
st1ined glan. II YO\J can
3139.
work 12 hours per-k coil
LOST: gray and white · tor Interview 256-9363 Mrs.
female cal, Bahan ar•. Danltlo.
Lono haired but hn bean ===~===::::::==
cut short. Approxl malaly1!!lc_.!!.S!!Itua~t~lon~s!.:W=•n!!!t~ld~
Milt ago. No collar. Repair or remodeling
915-4295.
_.k, flooring, doors, wall
paneling, ceiling, or floor
LOll: Red lick IIOUnd, lila, lkllng, 992·27, .
brokan COllar. Racine·
Iathan Rd . .rea . Hew vacancy to care lor
RIWII'II.Jim Clrcw. ,.,. elderly or lnvtlld.
2573.
Renonable. 992·MI22.

t~~~~.~~tB
_ 16 E. Second Street

Phoroe
•
1-1614)-992-3325 '
NEW LISTING - SUm·
mer hOme ori lhe Ohio
River. 1968 Fleetwood
mobile home with 3
bedrooms, 1'12 baths, ex,cellenl drilled well ,
stove and refrigerator,

gas F.A. furnace and 3.7
acres. Only 513,500.
STA.TELV FAMILY
HOME - Distinctive 4
bedroom home with 2
full baths, large rooms
and nice birch kitchen,
central heat and Wood·
burner, lull basement,
allached 2 car garage
and large glass enclo•ed
patio.
RACINE - 10 rooms
just remodeled. 5
bedrooms, new bath,
new gas F .A. furna ce,
dining, lots of cabinets
! in the kitchen, flower
room and large lot.
$40,000 . .

NEW LISTING - Only 2
yrs. old. Brick veneer
home, 2full baths, base·
ment, insulated, copper .

plumbing, F.A. furnace
and 211replaces. Almost
4 acres. Easy terms.
$60,000.
IN GOOD SHAPE 66x100 lot/garage , 3
bedrooms,

nice base-

ment, good corpeting,
storm windows &amp; drs ..
natural gas F.A. fur·
nace, dining and nice
view of town. $27,500.
NEW LISTING - Small
home, small prlte. 4
room . hOuse with 4.15
ltrt. Needs some work
but y01.1rs lor only $7,500. •
YOUR HOME IS YOUR ,
FAMILY TI!ADE ·
MARK. NEED A BET·
TEA ONE CALL

tn·UU or 992·•76.

uo~rtvr.\

PEST CONTROL
Roa c h es ,

but

has

stove

Ants and other small in·
. sect control .

FREE ESTIMATES
1 or

an d

@'erebandlse

refr igerator. Included also
5 concrete steps, all cement
blocks, 4 sets of anchors,
and all the underpi n.hing .
Very good condition . One

Ph. 614-446-2801
l-27·1 mo.

couch lor 520.00. Phone 992·
6196.

Antiques
ufil. Ca ll alter 6 p.m. 992· 53
2288.
ATTENTION :
( IM ·
POR TANT TO YOU) Will
3 bedroom house. $200. pay cash or certified check
month , SIOO. deposit. for antiques and collec·
References. Close to mine

1. 742·2126.
42

- Addons and
relflodeling
- Roofing and gutter
work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing and
electrical work
(Free E stimates)

and refrigerator in
condition. $75 each .

2 bedroom house, stove,
ref r igerator , carpeted,
remodeled kitchen S. bath
in Pomeroy. $195. mo. plus

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bedroom Mobile Home.
Adult s only . Brown ' s
Trailer Court, Mi ner sville .

54

Misc . Merchanise

SWIMMING
POOL S:
P R E S EA SO N
SA LE : $999 .00
IN ·
!!
Above
groun
d
STALLED
For sale or rent; 3 bedroom
mobile home w ith expando pool completely installed
on large re nted lot, SR 143, starting at $999.00. Pr ice in·
992·3324.

furnished, w ith wa sher and
dryer , new carpet and
luminum buil d ing .

2 bedroom Mobile Home .

Raci ne area. 992·5858.

Twouphol
mor.'lth
ial.
for
sterspr
inging
fu rspec
niture
Ric hard Mow er y, Sr .

Owner. 675-4154.
2 bedroom Mobile· Home,
fu nished. adults preferred.
Bea uti ful r e d 1978
Deposit. 992·2749.
Ka wa sa k i Kz 650 Sr , low
cepted , no pets. Bachelor

c.b.'s, 8 track ta pe players

apt. 1 bedroom. Joh n and speakers. Good por·
Sheets, 3112 mil es south of tab le black and white t .v.' s.
Midd leport Rt. 1.
See at Uncle Buddy s Trade
===:;=~=:::;:==

Apartment
for Ren!

Pomeroy , Oh .

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

All ly pes of roof w o r~ ,·
new or repai r gutters
and dow nspouts, gutler
c l e &lt;~ n i n g and po1inti ng.
All work g u.ua nteed .

Sept ic System s
eWater, Se wer &amp; Gas
Lines
1 Dump Tru ck
Lice nsed &amp; Borided

YOUR LAWN

CJ',., _

-

POMEROY

NEW

.-.ear
Meigs Mine No. I. 3
bedroom ra nch on 2112
acre ground . La r ge
modern ki tchen and liv·
ing r oo m, stora ge shed
and garden area. A LL
Lt:t

I INI.i -

FOR ON LV$32,000.00.
NEW LISTING - With
5% down this 2 bed room
home In the country can

be purchased for ap·

Young

$24,900.00.
NEW LISTING - In
Middleport. A 2 story

frame home with 3-4
bedrooms, dining room ,

liv ing room , large kit·
chen, has new carpet
th r oughout . Ho me
comes

w ith

several

rooms lull of almost new
furniture . Must see to
believe. Jusf$42,600.00.
LANDSCAPED FOR A
TRAILER - And has
water an d electr ic
available. This 1.25 acre

lot is in the Southern
School Distr ict and is
only $3,500.00.
LARGE 2 STORY With ~ big lots and ~ big
bedrooms. House has
had a lot of remOdeling
t!nd has nice cabinets in

the kitchen . would
make a nice place tor
childreN. Close to Mine
No. 2. $26,900.00.
ALMOST NEW RANCH
- Approx. 4 years old
and nos over one acre of
ground that Is land·
scaped
beaullluliy .
There is 3 bedrooms, an

attached garage
anothe. · garag
$39,900.00.
WE Ht,.VE OVER 10
PROPERTIES
TO
CHOOSE FROM,. STOP
BY AND LET US SHOW
THEMTOVOU.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr. ;
99Hlt1
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Do"le Turner

"2-5"2

Jean Trusstll 949-ZHI!
_!&gt;!!,ICElB"H259 .

111l..~~

.t ..ll

•

Hours:
Mon.· Tues . 9·6
Weds.· Fn 9-7
5 9· 5

Fann Buildings
Utility Buildings
Sizes from 4x6 to 1b:40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rl. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.

Ph. 61 4·843·2591
6 15·ff c
Ke e ~t iHm Ad tor Fulurt Rele re11 ce

J&amp;C
SANITATION
SERVICE

APPLIANCE SERVICE
Call Ke n Young
Ser111Ct

985-3561
A L L MAKE S

• D1 sposa ts
• Dt ~ h~~~~ ~ h ers

Tra sh Pickup In
The Village of
M iddleport, Oh .
Ph 992 5016
•
Or 992 -7505

•R a ngu
•H o! Water Ta nks
Repa•ring S.n cc 1913
" 5pec. a 1R ates ft) r "
"' Com l a u n dn!! ~
"" Renta i P r opert•es

Filrm

Equipm~mt

~

.4·17·tfc

o" ltpt. Houst&gt; Ownen

Rea l good shape, p s., new
tires. $1.200. or best offer.
Must se ll. 1976 Chrysler
Cordoba, al l power, needs
moto r. Rear window
defogger $1 ,000. or best of·
fer. 949·2145.

Used R-40 Ditch Witch
Trencher. 1-614-694·7842.
74
Motorcycles
1980 Kawasak i 250 LTO.
Four 15,000 gallon tanks Exc. cond. 5800. 992-6249.
located above ground at
Athens, Oh io. 53,000.00
each. Phnne 1-304-422-2781 . 1978 Honda 400 Hawk, exc.
cond. lots Of e)(tras. 992·

4 u,ooo gall on tan ks
located above ground at
Athens, Oh. $3,000. each. 1·
304-422-2781.

1pansportatlan

7467or742~31S4.
n

No Sunday Calls

BUYING
SILVER &amp;GOLD
COINS

tensive remodeling.
• Electrical work
• Roofing work
12Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583
4·26·1 mo.

SMALL

• W i! ~ h !!n
• Dr ycn

949·2860.

CONSTRUCTION
New Homes
ex -

Sizes
" From lOxlO"

F a~!

" Bea utifu l, Custom
Bu il t Ga rages" ,
Call for free sid ing
esti mates, 949·2801 or

ROUSH

ALL STEE L

For

SIDING CO.

3·11 ·1fc

co
11 i e type,gentle,
f e rna
I e, 1·~~
-~Mo~b~ite~H~om~•~P~·~,,~,~~n~f.=~=======~
housebroken,
good
with children . Will furn ish
shots and w or m i ng . 71
Auto s forSal e
Humane Soci ety, 992-7680. 1970 Ford Mustang Mach 1.

61

10 l·tfc

BISSELl

ATHENS SPORT
CYa.ES
Stim son Av e. Atti f ns,

Effective 4-6-81
MON . thru SAT .
9 to 5
Closed Thursday
4-9·1 mo. pd.

mi ni ature

pro x . 12% interest .
House has new siding,
new roof, new septic,
new carpet, and front
and
r e ar
por c h .

992-5682

4· 15· 1 mo.

PA.RTS AND SER VICE

small

Hr s. : Mon .·Fri.
9 A.M.·l :30 P.M.

/

NEW STORE HR

Pomeroy

registered. Cal l 949·2657
anyday after 4:30p.m.

- Auto and Truck
Repair
- Tran s mis s ion
Repair .

PH. 992-7201

322 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

~LANDMARK

Pets lor Sale
S6
1 walker female, 4 years
old; 1 walker pup. All VKc

ROGER HYSELl'S
GARAGE

~========~-=========4~=======:::
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
BAILEY'S SHOES:
SIDING

OF SHRUBS
FOR lANDSCAPING

ment . 992·5434 or 882·2566.

I

1

2 4 tt c

AWIDE SELECTION

1 r oom effi eiency apart-

I

1 Backhoe

949-2862
949-21 60

AT
POMEROY
LANDMARK

stairs apartm ent. $150.
month plus uti lities. sso.
'cteposit. No pets. Ava iI I
May 1. Call 949·2875
4:30p.m.

1· 7·

1 Excavating

F r ee E s tim ates
ReM,on rt. bl e Pri ce s
Cn ll How;nd

Corn for sale. ·s3 .00 a
i wo bedroom fu r nished buschel. 667·3566.
apartment. 992-5434 or 1·
304-882·2566.

2 bedroom fu r nished up-

Ph. 367·7560

2 B li e

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

n Post ., 92 Olive Street,

992·3874.

Septi c Tank s

County certifi ed
Roush Lane
Chesh1re, Oh.

t-;:========~-;::::===:=====;f;=::======:::::;

Gallipolis.

Furn ished 2 bedroom up·
stai rs apart ment. Adu lts
on ly , no pets. M iddleport.

Ga s Line· Ditches
Wa ter Line Hook-ups

Call742·3195
or 992-7680

mileage, loaded w ith ex·

2 bedroom Mobile Hom e tras for sale or trade,
ut ili ties paid , 1 child ac· $2,000.00. Also good used

llf&lt;~t er · Sewer·E lectric

4o Co mm erc 1 &lt;~ l

V.C. YOUNG II

eludes pool , deck, fence,
filter , liner and install ation
under nor mal ground con·
ditions. Free shop at home

$5400.00. 742·3025 or 992· service. Caiii ·800·62H511 .
3027.
'

your pr esent electrical
sy stem.
Resident•al

992-6215 or 992-7314

Nothingor tooentire
la rge.estates.
Also,
tibles
guns, pocket watches and 1
coin collect ions. Ca ll 6U·
767·3167 or 557·3411 .

MILlER ELECTRIC . REESE~
SERVICE
' · For all of your wir·
TRENCHING
I · ing need s.
SERVICE
Let George Miller check

SERVICES"

Coppertone ga s cook stove
Houses for Rent

s year termite

guarantee

Located in Gallipolis

owner. 992·5533.

41

Bird s ,

Rodents, Spiders, Fleas.

water tank. Central air
conditi oning . Unfurnished,

I(, W\inq

H,•,JI!r

TERMITE aQCI

For sale: 1976 14 x 70 Win· TRAILER spaces for rent.
mobile home , 3 Southern Valley Mobile
bedrooms, lull length front Home Park, Cheshire, Oh.
windows. Has new hot '192·3954.

General
~

ARD

dsor

Main st.

H'ou&lt;tin• · ·
Headquarters

Business Services

by t he .

SOOfeet. 992-6370.

3324.

11
HelpWonled
GET VALUABLE lroln lng
as a y01.1ng business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
line! r01.11e carrier. Phone
Skafe·A·Way
summer us · right away and get on
schedule. Open Wed· tne el ig l ~llltv liS! at 992·
nesday, Friday, Saturday 21S6 or 992·2157.
nights from 7:30 to 10 :00.
Available lor private par· $185.00 to S500 weekly doing
lies, Monday and Tuesday mal!ing work . No ex·
nights, Saturday mornings perience required . AP·
or afternoons, or Sunday PLY : Circle Sales, P.O.
afternoons. Phone 915·9996 Box 22~ · 0, Richmond Hill,
or985·3m.
NV 11418.

Furnished Rooms

w ee k . Ki tc hen , and
televi sion lounge. Carr yout
stor e and r estaurant within

Brown's Tra iler Pa rk. 992·

STOBARTS Greenhouse Is
now opened . Ills located on
Racine Rl. 2, C.R. 100.
Hanging baskets &amp; bedding
plants. Vegetables &amp; plants
01 all kinds.

4 _____ G~IY~H~W~I~Y~---- ,
~

4S

for Sale

IRON AND BRASS BEDS · park. Can finance . Call '1'1 2· 44
Old furniture, desks, gold 2720 or 992·3589.

Rul Estate

Tomato, cabbage, and pep·
per plants. Also broccoli,
caullllower, sw"t potatd
planll around May l5th.
Spencer's Greenhouse ,
West Shade Rd. 3 miles
norlhwett of Chester. No
Sunday sales.

Mobile Homes

AU"TOMO BILE
IN ·
SURANCE been can· 1975 Granv ill e mobil e
celled? Lost your home, 3 bedrooms, fu r·
operator's license? Phone ni shed, wa sher and dryer1
992·2143.
air conditioning, porch and
~wning, metal building. Set
up on rented lot. $7000.00.
Call
992·3679 or 992·3027.
18
Wanted to Do

NOTICE TO .
CONTRACTORS
· Sealed croposals Will bereceived y the VIllage of
•Middleport, Meigs CO\Jnty,
Ohio, fn the office of the
Mayor, Village Hall( Mlddlepon, · Ohio unli 2:30
P.M., May ll, 1981, Md
~en publicly openell and
nad lor the construction of
Furnace repairs, electrh:al
WATER DISTRIBUTIOwork,
plumbing, mobile
N . SYSTEM
IM ·
home or residence. 992·
PROVEMENTS
5858.
' CONTRACT NO. 5
, The proposed work under
thlsConlraclconslslsof the
Will do all types of car·
construct ion of ap ·
.
proxjmolely 1850 lineal feet
meana
penter work. Experienced
Of 8' water line In place;
and responsible. No job to
hydrants; valvesi system
big or to small . Phone 992·
~onnec:llons; ana all ap-· '---------~ 3941 anytime.
,...
- --------------purtenances,
The estimated con ALTERATIONS &amp; genera l
struction cost lor this 7._____v!.a!!r~d._,S~a~le:.____
sewing, experienced, work
project is $181500.00.
Copies 01 .Drawings,
guaranteed. M. Meier. '192·
Specillcallons and Con· Yard Sale: 931 Hysell 5983.
tract d&lt;&gt;!:uments may be Street, Middleport, Friday
obtained or examined at and Saturday from 9 to
the office of Floyd Browne dark. 992·7453 . Jeans, Rug weaving. 992-5971 .
Associates, Limited, Convases, and lots of
sulting Engineers · Plan- flower
Would like odd jobs. Lawn·
ners, 181 South Main mise: •
mowing &amp; misc. jobs
Street, Marlon Ohio 43302.
working around homes.
A twenty-1lve dollar
($25.00) deposit wl!l be I
Public Sale
992·6595 .
required lor each set or ·
&amp; Auction
Drawings! Specifications
and Con rae! docume'nts Farm Equ ipment Auction,
taken from the above of· , Sat., May 2, 10 a.m. Siders
licesh the lull amount of Equipment Co. 1 mile S. of
11!11 estate
whlc will be refunded Pl. Pleasanton U.S. 35. 67S·
upon return of same within 3440 .
thirty (30) days alter the welcome. Cons ignment
bid opening. The successful ·
31
Homes for Sale
blddef may retain his
Brick house on wooded lot.
Draw ngs for futher use,
and his deposit refunded .
Three bedrooms, large kit·
9
wanted to Buy
Checks shall be made
chen, family room, double
.P8Yable to the Village of WANTED TO BUY : garage, deck. Mid-Sixti es.
Middleoort, Ohio.
GOLD ,
SILVER,
Ea&lt;:h bidder must Insure PLATINUM, STERLING· 992·5420.
that all employees and ap- COINS, RINGS,JEWELR·
plicants lor employment
Beautif ul three bedroom
are not dlscnmlnated V, MISC. ITEMS . . AB· ranCh brick home in Baum
MARKET
against because of race, SOLUTE
Addition , Pomeroy, Ohio.
color, religion , sex, or PRICE GUARANTED. ED Gas heat, central air. Call
national origin.
BURKETT
BARBER
Allenflon of !he Bidder is SHOP , MIDDLEPORT , 992-2571. 985-4145 or 1-687·
6-129.
directed to the spec ial con·
strucflon regulations in· OH10992·3476.
eluded herein relative lo
special requirements lor OLD COINS, pocket wal· Three or four bedroom
procurement of ·tabor, the ches, class rings, wedding house, carpet, fireplace
special informa11on given bands, diamonds. Gold or sundeck, two car garage, 2
In the Information to Bid·
Call J. A. Wamsley, and one half acres. Lovely
ders, to the Spet ial silver.
selling on SR 1 North. 992·
.Requirements tor wage Treasure Chest Coin ShOp, 7741.
Athens,
OH.
594·4221.
rates, the hours of em·
.pfoymenl as ascertained
and determined by the Wanted to Buy : class rings, For sale if you are looking
Department of Industrial wedding bands, anything for a home to buy . I have
Relations and provided for
several below market
in the laws of the Stale of stamped, 10K, 14K, or 18K pr ice. John SheetS, 3112
gold. Silver coins, pocket
Ohio.
The Owner reserves the watches. Call Joe Clark at m iles south of Midd leport,
right to reject any or all 992-20.5' at Clark's Jewelry Rl . 7.
bids and to waive any in· ·Store, Pomeroy, Ohi o 45769
formolllles in bidding.
24 acres with Oh io River
THE VILLAGE OF MIO·
DLEPORT , OHIO
CHIP WOOO. Poles max. frontage, furnished 4 room
Fred Hoffman diameter 1.4" on largest house, fuel oil furna ce &amp;
Mayor end. $12.50 per ton . Bundled dr illed well across from
(4) 14, 21 , 28, (5) s, 4tc
slab. 510.50 per ton. Kai se'r . 949·2286.
Del ivered to Ohio Pallet
''
_
Co., Rock Springs Rd., House and large lot in
Pomeroy 992·2689 . .
Syrat use. Six rooms near
Card of Thanks
Racine Volunteer Fire
Department wishes to ex·
tend their thanks to the
people who he Iped 01.11 the
Fire Department In their
gun shoot and hope to see
you all again this fall.

32

gm•g

For Si lver Dollars

GLENN BISSELl
949-2801
No Sunday Call s

4·24·1mo.

--

ScouiCamp Rd.
Chesler, Oh.

* Short gam e practice
* J)utting &amp; Chipping
Green Open
*Hole- In -One
*Pro-Golf lesson s
fo r all ages
* Repair : Cleaning,
refin ishing, new grips

length change,

weight change
* Fast ser vice

Ph. (614 ) 985-3961
4-23·1

n onn st., R1 c1ne, Oh.

PH. 949·2777

Quality Built
Econom ically Priced

* Complete Auto and
Ttuck Repair
*Rebu i lt Automatic
Transmi ss ion s
on
most Am eri ca n Model
' Cars.

t$225.00 Parts &amp; Labor
Plus Flvid.

* 24

Hou r
Service

Wretk er

• Triple AAffiliated.

4·6· 1mo.

~======~~~~
11

Equipment

s1211 TO s1s-

H~ e

1mprovements

Scottie camper to'r sale. Gene' s Car pet Cleaning ,
992·3791.
deep strea m extract ion .
F ree
es t im at ed ,
reasonable rates, scot-

servaees
71
llulos for Sole
1979 Corvette; mint con·
dillon; low miloogewith all 81
Home
options .
Reasonably
1
1
priced. Aller S co ll378·61171 ----'-'m'"p~r~o~
v e~m
!.'.e~n!.'.s.__
or378·62'13.
French City Pa inting .
Residential,

comm er ci al ,

e&gt;ct e r i or .
For Sale: 1979 Trans Am i nter i or ,
Specia
lizing
In
Interior
with western wh eels,
painting, paper hanging &amp;
raised While letter radials, textured
ee llings. Free
loaded .lor $6300.00 or best
estimates. 367·7784 or 367·
offer. 992·S620.
7160.
1974 Nova Hatchback 350,
power i steering, power WILL do plumb ing,
pain ti ng ,
brakes, body's In real good roofing ,
remodel
ing
and
electrical
shape. ' Bosl offer. 992-6786
work. Free estimates. Call
or992·3941 .
985·4121 .
1978 Fairmont station
wagon. Am·fm 8 track,
p.s., p.b., a.c. S2,99S. 985·
.m5.

1911 Chevy Impala two
dOOr after S p.m. call 985·
4222.

chquard. 992-6309 or 742·
2211 .

12

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

WAT E R
WELL S .
Domestic and com mercial ,
pump sales an~ service.
Tom Lewi s Dril li ng .
Seasonal discount on pumps. 1·304-895·3802 or 1·304·
895·3641 .

l4

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

--~!.!!:!!!.~-=="-­

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR - Sweepers,
toasters, Irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.
Noxl to State Highway
13
E•uvallng
Garage on Roote 1, 985·
COMPLETE sever in· 3825.
stallation &amp; backhoe service for Raclne·Syracuse Available to handle all y01.1r
sewer district. Ooler work electrical needs. Repairs,
II needed . 949·2293.
wiring , re·wlrlng, In·
stallallon, mOdifications,
r.nldtntlal, '
DllZ ER work. Small jobs a revisions,
farm, business. No lob to .
spec ially. 742-2753 .
large or to small. Available
Immediately. Bill Cedle at
992·1182.

1980 Chevy Monzo 2 plus 2
hatchbilck. 8,000 miles. 4
CYII r, 4 Speed In ex•
CFIItnt condition . Sell for
- -. 992-6316.
I

•

�Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

EMS runs reported

'Fire truck contributors listed
Anew lightweight fire truck which
is the first dispatched to scenes of
fires has been secured by the Orange
Twp. Fire Department headquar·
tered at Tuppers Plains.
The truck was made possible
through donations by individuals
and businesses. Contributors include:
Cindy Schneider, James Carpenter, James and Ileen Swain,
Henry Smith, Ronald Robinson,
Warren Van Meter, Roland Torrence, Larry Baker, Wayne Brickles,
Harold Henderson, Roger Pullins,
Clara Follrod, Roy Rollins, Gary
Wright, Garth Sovel, Bess Webster,
Marvin Murphy, Delma Dotson, Don
Landon, Clyde Sanders, Jim Duvall,
John Boyd, Dale Boston, Charles
Craft, Joe Mitchen, Clifford Wood,
Raymond Salse~. Jerry Hawk, Wm.
Wells, Joyce and Elton Ritchie, Tom
and Lucille Burroughs, Clay E.
Green, Jeff Needs, Tanuni Barber.
Eula Ward, Homer and Oneita Cole,
Gordon Caldwell, Carl Barnhill,
Fritz Goebel, Rubal Caldwell, Okey
Connolly, John Tillis, Edward Tan-

ner, Lyne Showalter, Alvin Myers
Jr., Wallace Damewood, Guy Spencer, Howard Caldwell, Jr., A. F.
Gainer, Brian and Kathleen
Manicka, B and J Service Station,
Robert Edwards Sr., Mr. af¥1 Mrs.
C. B. Lamp.
Libby Sayre, Linda and John
Damewood, Charles Chaffee,
Josephine White, B. F. Uptbn, Liz
Winebrenner, Dora May Caleway,
Michael Guess, Gordon Ridenour, S.
R. Findling, RobertS. Burke, Helen
Dorst, Don Sprague, Virgil Cozart,
Denzil Huffman, Bob Edwards, John
Arbaugh, John Hensley, Marvin
Murphy, John Rice, Darrell Landon,
Bob Murphy, Gary Murph; , Clyde
Headley, Jackie Gaddis, Ina Van
Meter, Carl Reed, Jim Ferrill, ·
Leslie Scarbrough, Roy Reed, G.
and G. Auto Sales, Jack Farrar,
Ulah Swan, Edith Harper, Tony
Jones, Robert Ellis, Ina Massar, ·
Harold Barnhart, John Smith, Cecil
Caldwell, Gary Warner, Keith Chaffee, Starling Massar, Bulah Maxey,
Oscar Batx:ock, Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Carson, Grace Kuhn, Conkel

Kindergarten registration

0

Antizues, Jeanne Baker, Paul
Roush, Garth Sovel, Bob and Helen
Dorst, Mr. and Mrs. Harley Rice.
Beryl and Linda Wilson, Gordon
and Jill Holter, Roland Glenn, Benny Upton, Carl Findlin~, Maxine
Wiener, Cookie Cassady, V. C.
Waters, Lewis Miller, Terry Swartz,
Nina Robinson, Lindsey Lyons,
Terry Talbort, Paul Gerlach, Doug
Bissell, Ed Murphy, Jim Smith, Ted
Connolly, Paul Brooks, Wilbur Rice,
Morty Sanders, Jim Stelter, Ray
Craft, Ronnie Barnett, George and
Jane Ratcliff, Roger,Spencer, Violet
Millhone, Mrs. K. R. Young, Nonna
Newland, W. C. Blake, Flossie
Dillion, Maxine Chapman, Bernice
Mollohan, H. A. Sedgwick, Rita Fortney, Mrs. Veri Tuttle, James Stout,
Donald Harris, Aruella Frecker,
Wade Leonard, Rufus Cline, Madue
Gray, Leota Massar, Dana Hoffman, Wm. J. Probert, Jessie Dodderer, Harry Lodwick, Helen Cald·
well, Ken Caldwell, Homer Brown,
Terry Talbott and Mr. and Mrs. Hernard ShriversJr.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial

set at area grade schools
Registration for kindergarten for
the next school year has been set at
three locations in the Meigs Local
School District.
Parents may register their
children for kindergarten or as new
enrollees in the first grade (those
who did not attend kindergarten in
Meigs Local this year I on the
following schedule:
Pomeroy Elementary School,
Monday, May 4, 8:30 to 11 :30 a.m.
and from noon to 4 p.m.; Middleport
Elementary, Tuesday, May 5, 8:30
a.m. to II: 30 a.m. and from noon to 4
p.m.; Rutland Elementary, Wednesday, May 6, 8:30to 11 :30 a.m. and
noon to 4 p.m. Kindergrten age
students from the Harrisonville,
Salem Center and Rutland areas to
register at Rutland.
Any children whose fifth birthday
falls on or before Sept. 30, 1981, may
be registered for kindergarten and
any child whose sixth birthday falls
on or before Sept. 30, 1981 may be
registered for the first grade.

Parents at the time of registration
are to provide a record of un·
munization which includes four
DPT, three polio Sabin ; one measles
I Rubeola-after first birthday I; one
Rubella (Gennan Measles, and a
recent tuberculosis skin test (within
one year before entering school, and
the child's birth certificate.

Admitted--James Jones, Middleport; Felix Alkire, Pomeroy.
Discharged-Dora Heaton, Mae
Lambert.

Retail sales up
Retail sales tax receipts in Meigs
County for March, this year, were up
71.62 percent over receipts for March, 1980, but motor vehicle sales tax
receipts in the county were down
33.67 percent, State Treasurer Gertrude Donahey reports.
Retail sales tax receipts for March, 1981, totaled $103,262.45 compared to $60,167.10 for March, 1980,
an increase of $43,095.35. Motor
vehicle sales tax receipts in March,
1981, totaled $53,802.80 compared to
receipts of $81,122.95 for March,
1980, a decrease of $27,370.15.

·

Area Dea th
I Onn
. Smi'th
s

also preceded in death by four
brothers and three sisters.
A teacher and a school ad·
ministrator for 41 years, Mr. Smith
was well known in Meigs County. He
and Mrs. Smith had observed their
51st wedding anniversary on Aprill9.
He was a member of Heath United
Methodist Church, the Meigs County
Retired Teachers Association, the
Meigs County Retired Senior Volun·
leer Program and belonged to Middleport Masonic Lodge 363, Free andAccepted Masons. His hobbies were
fishing and gardening.
~urviving are his wife, Lillian
McAllister Smith, a retired teacher;
a daughter and son-in-law, Lois and
Richard Rosenbaum, former local
residents now living in Danville,
Calif.; a daughter, Mrs. Mary Sch·
wab of Charleston, W. Va., seven
grandchildren and four great- grandchildren.
Services will be held at 2 p.m.
Friday at the Rawlings- CoatsBlower Funeral Home with the Rev.
Robert Robinson officiating. Burial
will be in Gravel Hill Cemetery at
Cheshire. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Thursday. Masonic rites will
be conducted by Middleport Lodg~
at 7:30p.m. Thursday at the fWJeral
home.
·

A revival is now in progress at
Freedon Gospel Mission, Bald
Knobs, county road 31, through May
2, at 7:30p.m. nightly.
Evangelist is the Rev. Robert
Kromer of Colwnbus. There is
special singing each evening. The
public is invited to attend.

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REG. RET. $1 .69

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SOFT

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WIND
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lJI.'dut y without bulk. Smart new I'Od silhoue tte actu ally im pr tJVI!S lh e wa y drape n es hang and dra w.
Teflon -S coa titJg Oil all sl idi ng s ur fa ces mak es this the
l.'asiest opt•ra ling tra vers!.' rod avai lab le today' And
its pri ce is mud es l. In one and two-way draw styles.

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-.d

Tornado injures two persons
SWANTON, Ohio- Atorna~o touched down aboutfive miles west of
here TueSday evening, damaging at least six mobile homes and
causing some injuries, the Fulton County sheriff's department said.
Although details were sketchy, a spokesman for the sheriff's office
said the funnel cloud dropped out of a thunderstorm system moving
through tbe area at·about 5:30p.m. The twister touched down twice.
Two people injured, identified as Sberi Borck, 18, and her 11-monthold daughter, Tamara, were treated at Fulton County Medical Center
Jn Wa~n . They were hurt when the tornado struck their mobile
home, officials said.

Activists gear for protest
WASHINGTON - In an echo of the Vietnam era a decade ago, antiwar activists are gearing up for their first major national protest
aganst U.S. military involvement in El Salvador- a ll)arch Sunday on
the Pentagon.
While hesitant to give a finn prediction on how many people will
take part, organizers for the People's Anti-War Mobilization said they
expect "tens of thousands" to participate from as far west as Tel&lt;l!S
and as Iar north as Minnesota.
Smaller marches are planned Sunday in San Francisco, SeaVle,
Denver, Kansas City and Tucson, Ariz.

Prime minister faces big test
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - Prime Minister P.W. Botha's
personal prestige faced its biggest test today in parliamentary elections that his National Party was certain to win.
With South Africa's black majority barred from vottng as always,
the Nattonalists were expected to win more than three-fourths of the
165 seats in the lower house of Parliament. It will be their ninth
national election victory Jn an WI broken string that began in 1948.
However, the popular vote was likely to be reduced by the
dissatisfaction of ultra-conservative Nationalists with Botha poll~ies
• they consider too liberal.
'

'

COLORI·· BOOKI

IIS

,::.$,69_

WNDON - Truckdriver Peter SutclJIIe pleaded guilty to manslaughter today in the Yorkshire Ripper klllings of 13 women in the
· north of England between 1975 and 1980.
The M-year-old Yorkshireman entered plea5 of innocence at the Old
Bailey Criminal Court to charges of murdering the 13 women but
pleaded guilty to manslaughter on the grounda of ''diminished responsibility ," or lack of full mental competence.

Wirtning Ohio lottery number

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ALSO IN STOCK:
OPTIONAL .BLADES
'

NYLON CUTTING LINES
GOGGLES
ENGINE OIL

ClEVELAND - The nwnber selected Tuesday night in the Ohio
Lottery's dally game "The Number" Ia lll.
The lottery reported eamlrigs cl P32,5Z9.50 fran tbe wigertng on
the drawing. Lottery ofttciala sald sales prior to the drawing totaled
·$1127,329.50, and holders ol winning tickets are entitled to share
$294,ml.

Wf'Ather
Cloudy and cooler with IC8ttered showers tonight and 'l'!lw1daY
mornJng, then clearing In the afternoon. l..4ws tonight
60. Highs
'I'bundaY In the miHII.
~ raiD 10 percent tonight and Thurlday. W!Ddlnortherty .....S IOqb tmlglil ·
·

STIHL®

a.aaee

The World'• wrgelt:hlliag Chaia S..w.

MEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
606 E . MillO
' Ph . 991Fronl End Alignmenl- 5

LD:

Pleads guilty to manslaughter

U 11 hk e all .the conventional b~u shc utter s / tnm ·
1ners you can hnd, St1hl" brushcl,ltters have an ex·
elusive advantage. Our Polycut lMhead .Tougher than
any hne lnmmer. 11 blazes through heavy growth.
And blades au tomal1cally retract to allow the
closest cutttng aro und trees, fences - even up
1gamst walls.
·
So wh ether you want a lightj,veight tnmmer for
p ur garden or a btgger model fcir mat or land clear ·
mg. get the add ed clittmg perf ormance of a Polycul.
Gel th e strength of St!hl.

-

Pomeroy,
Most Passenger Cars

"It is more destructive in terms of
its impact on the cities, the poor, the
dissdvantaged, the minorities and
the elderly," he said.
While attacking Reagan's
economic proposals, Stokes said the
speech was a moving appeal which approach to tax cuts," Glenn said.
"We need to consider the cuts very
undoubtedly will have an impact.
"I'd give him an Oscar on the carefully to make sure of their
basis of his performance," the targeting to stimulate business."
"The president wants to cut taxes
Cleveland Democrat said.
Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio, said it of middle and upper income tax·
appears Congress will go along with payers so they will come back in inReagan's budget-cutting efforts but vestments. But estimates are that
that the tax cut proposals "will unless it comes back on the order of
50 to 70 percent it won't achieve the
generate much more concern.''
"I have a substantively different objec~ive.' '

•

at y

He said he thought things like investment tax credits and reduction
of capital gains taxes would be more
advantageous to business and
stimulate economic growth more
quickly.
Rep. Donald Pease, D-Ohio, who
has made his own budget proposal,
said he wished Reagan had "spent
more time with the question of inflation and budget deficits."

en tine
1 Section , 14 Pages

15 Cents

A Multim edia Inc. Newspaper

Chessie system crews upgrade tracks

•

REG. RET. 14.28

own."

HEAVY APPLAUSE FOR REAGAN - President Ronald Reagan
receives heavy ~jpplause from members of a joint session of Congress
prior to addressing the group Tuesday nlgbt on Capitol Hill. At left is Vice
President George Bush and rtgbt Is Speaker of the Hoose Thomas F.
O'Neill. (AP Laserpboto).

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, April29, 1981

32~· ''

REG. RET. $5.64

said.
Rep. Clarence J. Brown, R-O!Uo,
also predicted that the GOP version
would be approved by the House
rather than an economic proposal
worked out by the Democratic
leadership.
"If the standing ovation he got
when he called for a new direction in
the economic affairs of the nation is
any indication, a majority should
support him when the vote comes
next week," said Brown.
Rep. Louis Stokes, D-Ohio, said it
appeared from Reagan's speech
that he has abandoned his own
economic program for the LattaGranun bill, which Stokes charged
was "worse than his (Reagan's)

VOI.30,No.10
CopyrighTed 1181

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ADIDRi~•ES t:xli\IGRES!I-Pre111dent Ronald Reagan reaciB letter
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get well soon or be would bave to give a speech In bls pajamas, as be addressed a jo!Dt session of Congress Tuesday night on Capitol HID. (AP
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MOUIHWAIH
39

1Continued from page I)

1
·
not want to meet with th e Umon.
hope we can sit down and end the enure problem ror the county. The
county corrunissioners acted in the

CARDS

WASHINGTON (API- President
Reagan's appearance Tuesday night
may give his economic program the
impetus it needs to push it through
Congress, said Rep Delbert Latta,
R-Qhio.
Latta, who is ranking Republican
tnerilber of the House Budget Committee, is co-sponsor of the economic
program being offered by the GOP
to counter the one proposed by the
Democratic leadership.
Reagan credited Latta's budget
work and said his administration is
fully behind the alternative offered
by Latta and Rep. Phil Gramm, DTex.
"Our count (of votes I this afternoon shows we're going to win,
and alter that speech we may win
bigger than we anticipated," said
Latta, of Bowling.Green.
"I'd hate to be the Republican who
would vote against that (economic)
package after that speech. And
some Democrats who claim to be
conservatives will have a 'hard time
explaining to the people back home
why they opposed it.
"I think we're in pretty good
shape," Latta continued.
One sign of the strength of the
GOP position, be said, is that Rep.
Jim Jones, D-Okla., chairman of the
House Budget Committee, is "at·
tempting to modify his packa~e.''
"That tells us something," Latta
•

REO . RET. 16.15

" As of Monday the engineer did

PLAYING

REG. RET. 12.39

Board.. .

"!think the county conunissioners
acted in good faith in finally sitting
down and working things out. I rna
hopeful at this point that the Meigs
County Engineer will sit down with
the Union and work out the work
stoppage al the county garage.

'

CLEANER

. RET. 12.40

CONVENTIONAL TRAVERSE RODS

Fred Haynes, regional director of
the American Federation of State,
County and Municipal Employes,
made the following statement :

Reagan's speech ·may
•
~ve Ian big push.

Revival in progress

K.irsd~ superfine

The clinic will be held every
Friday in May starting May I from
11 a.m. to I p.m. at the Chamber of
Commerce office in Pomeroy.
The public is invited.

Couples seek licenses

I

ELBERFELD$

dl~~~~~~c~~~~~~~h4lt.y=~~ ~!~ny~~~estofthecitizensofMeigs
after becoming ill at his home.
died
Monday evening
Theunexpectecliy
Middleport Emergency
Squad
transported Mr. Smith to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. He was dead
upon arrival.
BornSept.l9, 1904,atRodney,Mr.
Smith
was Wonner
a son of the
late John
H.
and Mary
Smith.
He was

To end marriages

Six emergency calls were an·
Rita L. Harmon, Middleport, filed
Marriage licenses were issued to
swered by local units Monday, the suit for divorce in Meigs County
John
Randall Thomas, 23, Pomeroy,
Meigs Emergency Medical Services Common Pleas Court against Terry
and
Cheryl Lynn Kennedy, 21,·
reports.
J. Harmon, Middleport.
Pomeroy;
. James M. Fink, 31,
The Racine Unit at 6:40 p.m. took
Janice Kay Grimm was granted a
Wade Johnson from Greenwood divorce from James Robert Grimm Rutland, and Vietrois L. Fink, 'll,
Road to Holzer Medical Center and and the marriage of Jane M. Shaffer Pomeroy; Clair Eugene Reed, 24,
at 6:42p.m., the Syracuse Unitt~ and Donald C. Shaffer was Reedsville, aM Janeen Ailsa Swain,
18, Reedsville; Douglas Edwin
Carl Schultz from Route 124 to dissolved.
Browning, 21, Rt, 3, Pomeroy, and
Pleasant Valley Hospital. The other
Terri
Lynn Pullins, 19, Rt. I, Long
four calls were answered by the Mid· Ask to wed
Bottom.
dleport Unit which at 12:29 p.m. took
Marriage licenses were issued to
Russell Robinson, Jr., from his Ronnie Dean Anns, 25, Rt. I, Long
residence to the office of Dr. James Bottom, and Charlotte Marie Mar- Dissolution asked'
Conde and at 1:50 p.m. took James cinko, 29, Long Bottom; Clifford
Cynthia Lynn Ord, Millersville,
Johnson from Beech St., to Veterans Longenette, 45, Rt. I, Reedsville, and Verne Alvin Ord, Millersville,
Memorial. At 4:06 p.m., the unit and Ruth Ann Griffin, 35, Rt. I, filed for dissolution of marriage in
took Joshua Blair from Coal St. to Reedsville.
Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
theofliceofDr. Conde. At5:36 p.m., r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - the unit took Orin Smith from his
home on Beech St., to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he was •
pronounced dead upon arrival.

Six hundred customers of MinerHOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
sville and Syracuse were without
DISCHARGES APRIL 'l1
power for approximately one hour
Angla Barrett, Margaret Bennett, as the result of an automobile acEunice Blackburn, Karen C~mpbell, cident at appreximately I a.m.
Dickey Christian, Thornton Cox, today. A car struck a power pole
John Hale, Mrs. William Hash and near the Roy Armes residence,
son, Noah Haskins, Tara Hughes, Minersville, Ohio Power officials
.
AU parents expecting to have Mrs. donald Lewis and son, Glenn reported.
children enrolled in the fall as kin· Little, Paul Ours, Marie Payne, Curdergarten students or as new tis Remy, Luverne Rockholt, Garnet
enrollee students in the first grade Smeltzer, Ola White.
BIRTH
are urged to register their children
A 1' ·
'lahl
attheappointedtimesand locations.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Carlisle,
PP Icabons avru
e
Questions concerning registration daughter, Jackson.
Carleton College Scholarship
may be directed to the principal's of·
grant applications for residents of
lice of the respective school: 'Mid- C
. .
Syracuse, who plan to attend
dleport Elementary, John Arnott,
OllilliiSSIODers to meet college,arenowavailable.
992-3387; Pomeroy Elementary,
The Meigs County Commissioners
Those interested are to contact
Robert morris, 992-2710; Harrison- will meet in regular session Friday PoliceChiefMiltonVarianforanapville Elementary, Greg McCall, 742·
beginning at 10 a.m.
plication.
3000: Rutland Elementary, Doug , - - - -- -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
Behnke, 742-2666, and Salem Center
Elementary, Charles Holliday, 7423114.

Blood pressure clinic planned
During May, the Meigs J:;ounty
Health Department and the Meigs
Mental Health Center will have a
free Blood Pressure Screening
Clinic.

Tuesday, Apri128, 1981

Middleport, Ohio

nev

E«t ietOiileN ••t-Frldaytllroulhflllkll7: ratrandmlld
Friday. Wanner with~ chance of showen Sabarday and SUnday.
Highs in the 11011 Frida)' and in the 70a to lower 101 s.turday and Sunday. Lows In the 401 early Friday and In the 501 to low tiOa Saturday
and Sunday.

Crews of tbe Chessie System bave
begun work to upgrade a portion of
the C&amp;O Pomeroy Subdivision in tbe
Gallipolis-Vinton area. Crews started work shortly before Easter using
a locomotive and ·spreader to clear
trackside brush to allow dumping of
newcrossties for later installation.
The new ties ' are arriving in
Chessie System and Family Line
System gondola cars and are

unloaded from the slow moving
work train by a specially equipped
end loader riding atop the cars.
ebessie System recently received
permission to abandon most of the
line which extenciB from Oldtown ·
YardnearLoganthroughMcArthur,
Vinton, Gallipolis, Cheshire, and
Middleport to Pomeroy. However,
the company has not actually abandoned the line and has continued

freight service between Hobson
Yard and Bidwell. The present track
upgrading iS apparently related to
an expected increase in traffic over
at least part of the branch.
Last year Chessie crews performed work in the Hobson yardCheshire area , installing approximatelyfivemilesofcontinuous
welded rail and performing other
upgrading work. The Ho~on Yard-

Kanauga segment is also used by
Conrail trains under a trackage
rights agreement.
The Chess ie Sys tem is a.n
operating unit of CSX Corporation
consisting of the Chesapeake and
Ohio, Baltimore and Ohio, Western
Maryland, and related railroads ,
CSX also operates the Family Lines
System.

Progress made for independent pact
CAMBRIDGE, Ohio (AP) - An of.
ficial 'from an eastern Ohio coal
company who met with United Mine
Workers' leaders says some
progress was made toward reaching
an independent pact that could get
the company's striking miners back
on the job.
"I think the meeting went in real
good faith," said Abe Bryan, director of employee relations for Boich
Mining Co., after Tuesday's session.
"Most of these mflltings, first
meetings, are spent on procedure
and fonnality."
The four-hour meeting, held at a
Cambridge motel, was attended by
company officials and \JMW leaders '
,from District 6, including its

president, Ed Bell. District 6 now," he said. "We're trying to get was not ready to negotiate independently of the international
represents about 15,000 miners in something where we can work."
southeastern Ohio and the West
Boich must wait to learn from union. He said he expected to keep
Virginia panhandle.
UMW officials when the next independent bargaining on the same
level as international talks.
Boich, with offices at meeting will be held, Bryan said.
Bloomingdale in Jefferson County,
Before the meeting, Bell said be
operates a nwnber of coal mines, including surface mines in Crown
City, Coshocton and Steubenville. It
is not a member of the Bituminous
Three breaking and entering in- school for the mentally retarded on
Coal Operators AB:tociation, which
cidents
in Pomeroy have been Apri!l3 stealing a stereo system and
UMW miners struck against March
solved and items recovered, tapes. In addition two bicycles were
'll.
Bryan said the company, which Pomeroy Police report.
taken lrom Landmark on April 24,
Police said three juveniles, and three radios from an Ohio
employs slightly more than 300
UMW miners, will accepi "anything allegedly involved in the incidents, Power Co. storage building near the
negotiated with the · UMW and have been turned over to Meigs Meigs Stadiwn in Pomeroy on April
County Juvenile Officer Carl Hysell. 28.
BCOA."
(Continued on page 121
The trio allegedly broke ·into the
"That's what we're working on

Police solve thefts

$1.2 ~ million
"We're very, very· proud," said
one official who participated in the
groundbreaking ceremony for new
residential facilities at Gallipolis ·
Developmental Center Monday,
Wben completed, the buildings
will be located on Mill Creek Road
on the site of the old QDC fannhouse
and dairy bam. Construction will be
finished by June,l982.
The building is designed to provide
community living for older GDC ,
clients with mild-to-moderate levels
of mental retardation, according to
James Middleton of Ironton,
president of the Parents VolWJteers
Association, for whom the land was
purchased.
The land was bought from the
state on Nov. 22, 111M, after special
legislatioo introduced by State Sen.
Oakley Collins (R-lronton) and State
Rep, Ron J8111111 (D-Proctor:vllle)
was pused by the general Usembly. The purchaae price was $1 for
tbe whole 10 acres, Mlddl.eton said.
The bulldlnp will COIIIIal ol four
eight-bed residenlial units, with a
holl!emanager's quarters. Each
building Ia de!igned to be 1\feclicald
certifiable, and will Cllllt $300,000
. each to construc:L Total cost for llll
four luet at $1,2&amp;1,7'12.
The- for thllldnd of prop 1111
hu been tn Jbe~~~Neallnce
It'll, ~ to MlddJetm, wi!o
noted some cllenta at GDC have
been there ever Iince the facility
wu known aa an epileptic hollpllll.
Since GDC's emphaaia later
changed to a mental retardltion

GDC project underway

unit, some of the epileptic cases
have since been classified as retarded.
With these new buildings, these
moderately dissbled clients will be
able ,IV care for themselves, Mill-

dleton said.
Part of the problem in location, he
continued, was to lind a spot near
the center grounds which hadn't
been flooded in almost 100 years.
The dairy bam spot was finally

111UtAD1G GROOND - !llael Ita OUier Calu.
(It peJI m) • II tile llpeden at 1 p .....
bJ ..... tel ::we.)' far I HW let If Nkleatlli
lleiiHiea far ellelta II GIUJpolla Developmealll C..
.... Tile lite II 1t Jbe old G0C farmJmee ol dllry

decided on, he said.
The buildings are designed James
J. Foley, a Colwnbus architect, and
construction will be handled by Ken·
ny Construction, Chillicothe.

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