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Voi.2~,No.

224

coeyrlghtect '"'

•

at y

en tine
2 Sections, 12 Pages

IS Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 5,1981

Inflation ·may cause
additional ·spending

TilE MILITARY AND TilE BUDGET - l&gt;elease Secretary
Caspar Weinberger, slated to testilY before the Senate Anned Services Committee taler Wednesday, briefs reporters at a Pentagon
news conference on the ·admlnlslraUon's proposed $33 billion Increase
In defense spending. (AP Laserphotol

ToDAY

•• ~IN THEW

Physician faces indictments
COLUMBUS, Ohio - A Columbus pollee narcotics officer said today
several indictments will be sought against a physician charged with
aggravated trafficking In drugs and alleged sexual misconduct.
Dr. Alta! Mussain, 49, was arrested Wednesday and freed on $15,000
surety bond.
·
Hussain is accused of allegedly giving " prescriptions for drugs and
drugs in exchange for sexual favors," Del)'lpsey said.
Hussain, who has established practices in Columbus and Marion,
also holds the franchise for Physician Weight Loss Centers in the two
cities, according to the officer.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Reagan administration, finding support in Congress for its proposed
$32.6 billion buildup in military spending through 1982, is promising to
seek even more money for defense tf
it fails to tame inflation.
Secretary of Defense Caspar
Weinberger, outlining a budget he
said would make ."a major start on
meeting needs too long urunet, '.' said
Wednesday he would submit a supplemental request if prices of
military hardware increase beyond
the administration's estimates.
"We have to keep this program intact, absolutely," Weinberger told
the Senate Armed Services Committee.
Under questioning by Sen. John
Warner, R-Va., Weinberger con·
ceded the revised defense budge_t envisions lower inflation than the Carter administration:s forecast, which
he previously said was un·
derestimated.
But he said it is "fair to assume a
lower (inflation) rate" if President
Reagan's proposed tax cut and
domestic spending reductions are
enacted.
The Reagan administration

predicts inflation will drop steadily
to 7.2 percent in 1982 and 4 percent in
1986 as the president's economic
recovery program takes hOld. It was
12.4 percent last year, and the Carter administration's last forecast
was for 9.6 percent in 1982 and 6 percent in 1986.
" If what we hope does not come to
pass and we are not able to reduce
inflation and don't get the cuts we
are seeking, then I will have to
present you with a supplemental,"
Weinberger said.
Members of the committee
generally welcomed the budget increase, which woUld pay for an expanded Navy , a new homber, a new
kind of nerve gas and substantial
pay raises for military personnel.
"There is no doubt that increased
resources are required," said Sen.
John Tower, R·Texas, the committee chairman.
Sen. John Stennis, I).Mjss., the
senior Democrat pn the panel, told
-Weinberger, "I believe you wtll get
your money this year," and Sen.
Strom Thurmond, R.S.C., said the
additional spending is "absolutely
essential.''
Tower indicated he wa!'ts the Pen-

lagon's major budgets approved by'
Congress before there is any
backlash about cuts in domestic,
programs.
"Our proposed increases would

significantly and quickly strengthen
our ability to respond to the Soviet .
threat at alt levels of conflict and in
all areas of the world vital to our
national interest," Weinberger said.. .

EL SALVADOR BRIEFING- Secretary of State Alexander Halg
answers questions lor reporters on Capitol Hill Wednesday after
briefing Senators on El Salvador. At right Is Senate Majority Leader
Howard Baker ol Tennessee. (AP Laserphoto l
'

.Further aid depends on .intervention
WASHINGTON (AP)- Secretary so," he said.
The administration has accused
of State Alexander M. Haig Jr.,
diSmlliSing a call to draw the line Cuba and other conununist nations
now on ai(l to El Salvador, says any of complicify in smuggling at least
further escalation d u.s·. in- 200 tons of military supplies to leftist
volvement depends on what the insurgents in El Salvador.
''This is no longer an acceptable or
Soviet Union and Cuba do.
The possibility of additional aid, tolerable kind of activity in thi:&gt;
Haig said Wednesday, ''will depend hemisphere," Haig declared after a •
largely on the willingness of Cuba, closed Senate briefing.
Earlier, the No. 2 Democrat in the
the Soviet Union and those
associated with them to continue to Seaate said the Reagan adintervene illegally In the affairs of ministration should supply no
the member states of this military assistance .to El Salvador
beyond the 20 additional advisers
hemisphere.''
Specifically, Haig refused to say and $25 million in aid.
"Enough is enough," said Sen.
whether U.S. aid would stop with 20
additional military advisers and $25 Alan Cranston of Califomia , the
million in new military assistance. assistant Democratic leader in the
"It would be foolish to attempt to do Senate. "In the interest of protecting

American lives and avoiding deeper Salvador, and anything that can be
and more dangerous U.S. in- done to make sure that refonns are
volvement in the fighting in El carried out and elections held,"
Salvador, we must draw the line Brady told reporters.
The rightist leader, Maj. Roberto
somewhere.
·
"And as far as I'm concerned, this D' Aubisson, told reporters in El
Salvador that he has met with U.S.
is it."
Cranston said Congress is unlikely officials since Reagan took office
to block the extra ailvisers and a~d "if there is a change, I think
military aid, "but whether some they would accept it."
Haig and Brady said Roger For&gt;people will try or not I don't know."
Haig and White House Press taine, who presently handles Latip .
Secretary James Brady, mean- Ameri~an affairs for the National
while, denied a Salvdoran rightist Security Council, met with
leader's statement that the United 0' Aubisson just once - in February
States wouldn't oppose a military 1980, almost a year before Reagan
took office. Fontaine made no
coup.
statements along the lines attributed
Brady called that "pure fiction."
"We are in support of the stability to him, Haig and Brady said.
of the current government of Ei

118 people remain hostage
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - A Pakistani plane flew back from Kabul
today with 21 people f~eed from a hijacked jetliner. But U8 others, in·
eluding several Americans and a World Bank official, remained captive, and the hijacker again threatened to set off grenades.
He demanded that 79 Pakistanis, including political prisoners, be
flown to the Mghan capital. A Pakistani official said some of them
were in jail, butthat others were "not even in custody."
The hijacker has identified himself as Moharrunad Alamgir, said he
has two accomplices and hand grenades abOard and that his final
destination is Iran.

Promise aggressive campaign
wASHING TON - Three Reagan administration Cabinet officers
are promising an aggressive campaign against alleged union corruption in an apparent effort to blunt charges that protection of worker
pension funds has been only half-hearted In recent years.
Leading the new initiative is LabOr Secretary Raymond Donovan,
whose confinnation hearings were clouded by allegations that his New
Jersey construction firm made payoff• to the Teamsters union in the
late 1960s to buy lahor peace.

New born baby dies twice
CHARLESTON, Miss. - Anew horn boy who appeared dead at birth
revived at a funeral home only io die hours later of respiratory failure
and apparent brain damage, olllclals say.
The b&lt;!y, born Tuesday at Tallahatchie General Hospital, was found
crying Wednesday at the funeral home where he had been left ove•night, medical authorities said.
The baby was rushed back to the hospital, but died of respiratory
failure and apparent brain damage that occurred before birth, a doctor said.

Tax relief h_ills cause financial problems
COLUMBUS, Ohio (APl Property tax relief measures approved in the past decade l)ave con·
tributed greatly to fiacal problems
now facing Ohio's schools, a
legislative committee has )earned.
Frederick 0 . Stocker, professor of
economics and public ad·
ministration at Ohio State Univer·
sity, said the state went overbOard
on property tax relief and restraint
following enactment of the personal
and corporate income taxes. He
called such provisions " ill conceived, uncoordinated and often inconsistent.''
"Besides undercutting the
revenue, (such provisions) complicate the tax to the point that virtually no one knows how it works or
what kinds of unintended effects and
distortions it is having," Stocker told
the House Finance Coriunlttee on
Wednesday. The panel ts considering the House version of Gov.

·James A. Rhodes' proposed state
budget.
Although he does not favor substantial hikes in present rates,
Stocker said the state should avoid
further decline. He urged consideration of plans under which a
unifonn statewide levy would be im·
posed on industria~ conunercial and
public Utility real estate and all
tangible personal property.
The tax would replace aU existing
school operating levies, except those
for school debt service or county,
municipal or other property, Stocker
said. "The revenue would be
distributed by the stale in the form
of basic school aid," he said.
Such . a change probably would
require voter approval of a constitutional amendment, he said. ·
Stocker, whose study on financing
Ohio's schools was published last
fall by the National Education

Association and the Ohio Education
Association , said tax reli ef
measures have diminished the
productivity of local property levies.
That's contributed to a drop in
property taxes as a percentage of
Ohio personal income, he said.
·•·Had Ohio property tax rev_enues
been held at the percentage of personal income that they represented
just four years ago ... I estimate
roughly that schools would be
receiving this year a half billion
dollars more revenue from this sour-

ce."
Meanwhile, the Citizens' Council
for Ohio Schools said Wednesday
that lawmakers should bOost state
taxes to provide at least $1 billion
more for primary and secondary
education for the next two years.
The private school research group,
with offices in Columbus and
Cleveland, is supported by foun-

dation grants and some corporate
contributions.
Carla Edlefson, associate director
of the council, said new r:evenue is
needed to ensure adequate
education and make up for ground
lCJ:jt to inflation . and state budget
cuts. The council opposes solutions
to Lschool funding problems that
del"'nd on major changes in Ohio's
Copstitution or permanent earmarking of some taxes for
education, Ms. Edlefson said. lnste~d, an increase in state taxes is
• needed, she said.
Franklin B. Walter, state superintendent of public instruction, has
suggested placing a proposed hike in
the sales or income tax before voters
if the General Assembly fails to
provide money lor schools. Ms.
Edlefson hopes such action won't lie
necessary, however, since such
packages are hard to pass, she said.

Avalanche kills skiier
A winter storm packing winds of up to 50 mph dumped as much as 22
inches of soggy, heavy snow on Colorado, causing at least one death
and leaving hundreds of unprepared motorists snarled in traffic.
The ' Mineral County, Colo., coroner's office said one of the many
avalanches touched off by the stonn claimed the life of Dr. Larry
Holle, 30, of Pagosa Springs.
.
Holle was skiing with friends in the back country abOut one rrule
west of the swrunlt of Wolf Creek Pass in southem Colorado on
TuesdaY when he was caught in a JOI).foot-long snowsllde.

Winning Ohio lottery number

CLEVEI..AND - ~ winning number selected Wednesday night in
the Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Number" was 774.
The lottery reported earnings of $600,089.50 !rom the money
wagered on the drawing. Lottery officials said sales were $966,872.
Holders of winning tickets are entitled to share $366,782.50.

Weather
Cloudy with a chance of flurries tonight. Colder with a low in the
mld·20s. Cloudy Friday with highs in the mid-30s. Chance of
precipitation 50 percent tonight and 20 percent Friday. Winds northwesterly 10-1~ mph tonight.
.
Eidended Ohio Forecast- Saturday through Monday :Fair through
the period. Highs in the mld-30s to nlld-40 Saturday and mainly in the
40s Sunday and Monday. Overnightlows in the 20s.

S'ruDENT COUNCU.. - An lnnoviiUon ID the program of the
lbrrllonvlUe Elemenlary School 18 the etlablllbment of a student
council. The council CGmposed of two representatives from each grade
hal the responsibility of plannlDJ money-raisllll acllvilles lor 'leld
tripe plus plannllll bulldlDC improwment projeclslo be carried o~t by
the studenll. Membel'llllllle eo~~ncll are: front, Ito r, Mellssa Markin,

Jeremy Rupe, first grade; Amanda Molden, Aaron Sheets, second
grade; Wendy Phillips, Danny Kennedy, third grade; back row,lto·r,
Christina Bass, Wesley Howard, fourth graders; Patty Johnson, Scott
Oberholzer, fifth graders and Julie WandiiDg and Jesse Howard, sixth
graders.

- -- -··----- -----

-~-

�'Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, March 5,)981

Commentary
I

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio •
Thursday, March 5,1981

I

•

'Reindustrialization~'

G_arry_~~u_~s

--...&amp;...-·_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. - . , -_ _

Two senators have sponsored i
bill to limit Japanese car imports to
1.6 million units a year. This kind of
prqtectionism is usually considered
anathema to free-market types,

though their business constituents
love selec!ive trade barriers. The
conservative columnist George Will
argues that some protection is
justified since U. S. firms do not

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Oldo

11'-m..:me

DEVOTED 1U 11lE MEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETr
PUbliSber

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

A.ss15taot PubJiaber/ControUer

Gellfl"ll Mauler

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of Tbe A110datfd Pl'etl, Lalaod OaUy Press Auodatlon aod

lb~

American New1paper PubUshen AnotiatJon.
LETI'ERS 01-' OPlNION are weltomed. They sbould bt 1ft.s tluln 3M wflrds long. All
lelten are 8ubject to edltiog aDd mWit ~ lllned with Dl.mP, add~s and lelepboot
number. NfUilSigued lenenwW bt pabUshed.LPtten lhoold bt In good taslr. addlfta:ing
Issues, oot ptnKIDIUties.

:M onopolies: proceed,
pass go, collect•••
Theodore Roosevelt must be spinning in his grave. The great 'Trust
Buster' took fierce joy in fighting the "robber barrons of Wail Street"
who tried to make monopolies out of the American railroad, petroleum
and other industries.
The Office of Management and Budget, in the name of economy and ef·
ficiency, proposes to transfer from the Federal Trade Commission to the
Department of Justice the FTC's responsibility for anti-trust iaw enforcement.
For 100 years 'big business' has fretted and fumed over the ban, under
federal law, on such monopolistic practices as below-cost pricing to drive
competitors out of business, refusing to sell to distributors who charge
less than 'manufacturer's suggested list price' and using the profits of
one subsidiary to subsidize the losses incurred by another in such practices as underpricing.
: In a letter to the OMB, the FTC points out that its proposal would " use
:the budget process to undo the consensus view, maintained since 1914,
:that dual enforcement of anti-trust laws by the Depariment of Justice and
:this independent agency is the best method of ensuring a vigorous and
. free competitive process.' '
: Congress has refused to make 'independent regulatory agencies' like
:the FTC subject to White House authority except in the appoiniment of
·Conunission workers. OMB Director David Stockman and others' of
:President Reagan's economic advisers, unable to change policy
:established in law-and endorsed by both Rebublican and Democratic ad:ministrations for a century-to please big business supporters who want
:to be freed from antimonopoly constraints, propose to do so by denying
. the FTC funds to function in the anti-trust field.
; This is 'comptroller management,' the use of the budget to make
:policy.
.
· Bigness, whether in government, industry or labor, -becomes a goal in
:itself of a large organization. It may make it appear effective. But it
:reduces competition, fails to benefit customers, client or member and
; stifles innovation and progress..
.
• Reagan and his supporters say they recognize this in goverrunent and
:labor. Their inconsistency in failing to see it in busin~ss threatens a policy
;which 100 years of experience has endorsed as a 'proper function of
;government.'

· ~Leuers
.

to editor

Allow me as a "Heap plan ap-

r: plicant" to voice my opinion about

I' Sunday's (Feb.

22)

edition con-

;·•. cerning Letha Proffitt's report abOut
,: State funds, and the manner of us
~ applicants.

.: According to Mrs. Proffitt, "Heap
• Plan coordinating" for Gallis-Meigs
::conununity Action Agency, she,
;; Mrs. Proffitt, states that rumors,
i' and misinformation resulting in ·~as she, Mrs. Proffitt, states, frantic,
.: mostly concerned phone calls from
'·; us applicants to the CAA office at
•• Cheshire, 0 ., brought about chaos,
.1as well as a big waste of their
:: precious valuable lime. Another
,; part of Mrs. Proffitt's report was
; that some of us applicants received
'defiers from .the "State Heap Plan
; Office" in Columbus, Ohio, stating
; that we would receive funding
· before they, the CAA office, had
l been notified.
,
: Allow us to answer your statement
: about our early received letters
' from the state. As we go back to last
: year when some of us asked you for
; assistance toward our electric bill
; .you refused us help. We had to
' borrow money and pay our heatlng
: bills, when you were supposed to
: help us.
• This year we applicants mailed
: letters to Columbus, asking the
: "Heap Plan Office," that we be
: given better consideration this year
• toward our heaijng bills.
: Some of us have bad to fight to get
: anything, or help in any way prior to
: this time from your "Outreach
: Program." I believe the paper
• atates you, Mrs. Proffitt, are the
: coordinator of this program, so that
: puts all blame on your shoulders.
• You mentioned phone calls to your
: CAA agency from some of us were
• disturbing. Misconception, chaos,

•

worst of both worlds.) We are to
pour money into the system that
crippled us in the first place.
America's gas-guzzling culture is
an affront to allies, who are even
more dependent on oil than we.lt exposes us to foreign suppliers. It traps
us in wasteful patterns that led to
Japan's spurt toward superiority in
the first place. Yet "conse':"atives"

want to reindustrialize the obsolete.
Will laments the fact that lighter
cars burn up fewe~ tires, thus cutling rubber sales. Yet he denounces
Japan and Gennany for using their
car and steel industries as job
programs. What is he recommending but the subsidizing of old
jobs at the wasteful work of
repeating Chrysler's failures ?

Reinduslrialization should be new
modes of production and
distribution, not the propping up of
old ones. Japan has used Its planning
powers to phase out the obsolete and
anticipate markets, once considered
the capitalist's skill. If we are to accept the vision of Detroit, reindustrialization can only mean our
self-dinosaudzation.

ET~ @~I Rlltl'~ ~-'TE\EG~

HUlM€
N.e,A.

"How did your meeting with Budget Director Stockman go?"

Corporate reports fill trash cans
NEW YORK (AP) -You can sense the mood of the times in corporate
annual reports, which each year at
this time weight the postman's bag,
and in more instances than companies admit, fill trash bags soon after.
This doesn't mean the· annual
report really is trash, but many a
household receiving a report, as a
right of shareownership, considers a
chainnan's message and a centerfold of smokestacks comparativley dull.
It is another matter for brokers,
securities analysts, mutual and pension fund portiolio manage~'~! , employees, soon-t&lt;&gt;-graduate students
at business schools, accountants and
government regulators.
For them there is always a

and a big waste of your government
paid-time.
Some of us have received notices
from the electric company - as well
as more than one shut-off notice,
which you ignored. Our minds were
troubled because of this pressure on
us.
Why condemn us applicants about
our cry for help by way of phone
calls to your CAA office? Walk a
mile in our shoes,- and you might
have the grace of understanding for
the poor people.
You mentioned about rumors,
about your CAA office, the personnel, and this "Heap Plan
Program." We applicants have had
to face y.ears of these rumors, they
come from business agencies and
centers - dedicated to helping the
poor people. We bave had to bear
•these false statements about us . .
Rumors have a way of hurting the
innocent people involved.
Mrs. Proffitt, your job is an
"Outreach Worker" helping the poor
people - not making rash statements abbut them.
Allow me to say, Mrs. Proffitt, I
enjoyed reading the front page article about the " Heap Plan
Program." We, the public, have the
right to know where the money goes.
·How many applications were mailed
to the Colwnbus office for assistance
for our poor people, and help toward
their heating bills.
Your article on this matter keeps
us fully informed which pleases us,
the public.
Please don't insult us in time to
come when we ask you for future
assistance.
We thank you for assisting us at·
this time. - Sylvia Carman.

Bucks face Purdue zn
Big 1 ~ fight tonight
By GEORGE STRODE

the fans, media and alumni. They
AP Sporll Writer
question whether his contract should
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
be extended another.season.
State's Buckeyes, battling the
Hugh Hindman, the school's
second longest losing streak in
athletic director, has remained nonCoach Eldon Miller's five year's,
corrunital, saying, "I bayen't made
close out the regular basketball any comments up to this point and
season at home, facing Purdue I'm not going to now. We still have
tonight and Iowa Saturday af- · · games left."
·
ternoon.
Miller will go with the same lineup
The Buckeyes bave dropped five that lost at Northwestern 6~
Big Ten game.! in a row, second only: Saturday with Clark Kellogg and
to the nine straight defeats in Jim Smith at the forwards, Herb
Miller's opening season in 1971\-77. Williams at center and Carter Scott
Ohio State went !1-18 and finished last and Todd Penn at the guards. All are
tn the confet'ence that winter.
seniors except Kellogg, a
However, this team had much sophomore.
more talent with four regulars back
Kellogg continues to lead the
from the 2HI NCAA Tournament Buckeyes in scoring (17 .6) and
power of 1979-00. Still, the Buckeyes rebOunding (11.7). His rebounding
are only 12-13for all games and 7-9 in also is the best in the conference.
theBigTen.
Williams needs 17 points against
Miller has become the target IX

specific message, a tip buried deep
in the fine type, something to be
discerned between ' the lines, a
reference to a new product by the
chairman. And there is a general
message too.
The general message varies with
the times. When environmental concerns first absorbed the country
more than a decade ago, some annual report covers depicted the
chairman 'in ankle-deep grass on the
company lawn . When lagging
productivity became an issue, cbarts and graphs abounded showing the
danger to the country. As expected,
automaker reports have switched
from graphic depictions off horsepower to fuel saving charts.
Today, the big doubt in the minds
of annual report readers concerns

the future. With the economy at a
crossroads, they are eager for tips
about the future, backed up by numbers and hari:l argwnents.
Infonnation rather than impression is needed, and that, says a
student of the annual report, is what
annual report readers are getting,
albeit with "some grumblings in the
executive suite.·~
Ricbard Lewis, author of the
statement, maintains that this
year's reports are "the most informative annual reports in ·
history." Some projections might be
softer than the hard data that people
seek, he concedes, but he states that
chairmen are getting the point.
. "Traditionally, executives have
been reluctant to make predictions
in the annual report," says Lewis,

whose Corporate Annual Reports
Inc. claims to be the leading
producer of blue chip annuals.
"Now," he says, ''the Secudlies and
Exchange Corrunlssion is telling
management to use infonnation to
make an educated guess about what
might happen. "
Their acquiescence, says Lewis,
"is an historic first stel' that will
iead to more specific projections in
the future."
In brief - and that too is a trend
detected in some reports - the annual report this year is a serious
publicatio~ . Like so many these
days, its authors and commentators
know they must give more than a
swnmary of the past, that they must
·also look into the murky future .
It's the mood this year.

CLEARWATER, Fla . (AP) Pete Rose arrived .. at the
Philadelphia Philltes tratmng camp
Wednesday and immediately
dismissed ·a suggestion that the
World Champions might become a
victim of complacency in 1981.
· Rose, who wiil he 40 next month,
said complacency comes from personality and that he didn' t believe
that type personahty extsled on the
Phillies.
The first baseman said that in all
the games he's played, all the hits
he's produced in his 18-year major
i~ague career, the most awesome
sight he had ever seen was the
parade for the Phillies after theY,
•

beat Kansas City in the World
Series.
"EverybOdy had the same eKpression on his face, happiness."
Rose recalled. "They (the players)
were overwhelmed. The people had
waited 97 years for that moment.
Believe me, there won't be any complacency. "
Rose, who reported a day late
becausehehadtwowisdomteethex-.
traded, said winning the championship was going to help the
Phillies because of the bad rap built
in losing three previous National
League playoff series.
" In the last month of the (1980)
season, this team learned how to

Haig Jr. was talking about the e.tent of U.S. military involvement
there.
For moi-e than a week, questions
put to the senior officials of the
Reagan administration, and the
responses, have resurrected
memories of the war.
And in the White House press
room, one wag with a sense of black

humor cracked that in 10 years.
" we'll have 60,000 American
casualties and ~ El Salvadoran
restaurants in Arlington" - a
Washington suburb where Vietnamese restaurants have sprung up
since the end of the Southeast Asian
war when refugees flocked here.
The administration has been ex-

Don Graff

If you've had enough by now of the
item-by-item, billion-by-billion
analyses of President Reagan's
economic blueprint for the national
future, this is for you. There's none
of that in wbat follows.
The subject does involve billions,
however - those to be poured into
the one major program that is to be
neither cut back nor put on hold at
current expenditure levels.
Defense.
No surprise there, of course.
There had been many advance words to the effect that the new adIninistration 's lean, trim budgeting
for the '80s included additional
billions for arms. So many words, in
fact, that it may have comes as a
surprise to some listeners when the
president coupled his remarks on
this subject in his actual address
with a pledge to root out waste and
fraud in the military establishment.
Waste in the military? That's an
issue that hasn't been much
publicized since the 1976 presidential
campaign of Jimmy Carter. Surely
you remember him?
Not that it hasn't still been kicking
around. For example, as the subject
of a recent House Appropriations

)(}(/ eor 'fl&gt;1.
)(}(/ Pf.4Wilj

A LfTTll /liM-

Committee report on de1ense funThe Reagan team at the Pentagon are then used to produce more
ding for 1981. The report cited 46 has its own plan for shaping up goods, compounding the return on
specific spending abuses hy the ar- military finances that may make the investment and &amp;panding the
med forces tha\ ranged from the pet- House document redundant. Or, con- economy's productive capacity.
ty - military personnel helping sidering how several previous new Similarly, money put into services
themselves from fuel and other sup- administra.tions have fared in this such as transportation enables
ply stocks - to the iminense area , maybe not.
people to reach jobs to produce mroe
failure to settle accounts with
Waste is not the only economic goods and services.
nations receiving U. S. military consideration involved in deterBut military spending is an end in
assistance. The General Accounting mining levels of military spending. itself, an economic 'dead end. A
Office estimates that last item, very There is aiso the overall impact flamethrower, a tank, a jet fighter
often involving personnel training ,., upon the economy itself.
contribute nothing further to
and transportation costs recipient
The conventional view is that the economic growth. The bucks stop
countries had contracted to pay, effect is stimulating, and it un- there.
alone represents a billion-dollar loss deniably is for specific localities
In short, in. terms of the supplyto the United States.
where outlays for military facilities side, demand-side philosophy of
In between come such debit' en- and hardware produced by civilian economics so popular in this adiries as deterioration of carelessly plants mean more jobs, expanded ministration, most of those billlons
stored equipment, overcharging by payrolls and money in the pockets of for defense pile up on the side of the
outside contractors, payment for the customers of local businesses. latter. Which is not this adwork never performed and, in the But on a national scale, the story is ministration's oft-stated economic
case of the Navy, questionable and different.
intention.
costly changes in ship design during
A case can be made that military
Maybe in the long run it won't
construction.
spending bas an ultimately negative matter. Maybe the other growthThe corrunlttee report put the effect upon economic growth. It is a . encouraging parts of that program
dollar cost to the Defense Depart- diversion of a significant portion of a wiil be sufficient to offset the
ment ,..- and ultimately the society's available funds from military drag . and yield the predicAmerican taxpayer - at tens of productive uses to nonproductive en- ted improvement .of the total
billions annually, more than the en- ds.
economy. Or, considering how
tire bu4gets of many social
Money invested in a machine tool previous new administrations have
programs that the administration is plant or electronic components fared with their programs for
targeting for deep cuts.
manufacture produces items that economic improvement, maybe not.

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DOONESBURY

unifonn, "

he

Greg Luzinski 's discontent,

WINS TOURNAMENT - The Southern Tornado
Freshman basketball ~m recently ended Its season
with a 13-1 record, by winning the Point Pleasant
Rotary Freshman Tournament. The Championship
Tornado team Is coached by Coach Bill Hensler. Pictured re (l""R,, front row, team members Charley

By Associated Press
'
DePaul, at least when it comes to
Dayton, has an abundance of basketball talent, says Biue Demon Coach
Ray Meyer.
"Usually when we come to
Dayton, they play the pants off of
us," Mey er said following his No. 2ranked team's 8&lt;Hl4 nonconference
victory over Dayton on Wedneday
ni ght. "But in this case, with this
yea r's team, we have too much
talent fll{ Dayton and Coach (Don )
Donoher."
It marked the 13th straight victory
fo1· DePaul, now 2G- I overall.
.
The Blue Demons led 3!1-33 at the
half, then outscored the Flyers 1\-2 in
the '"cond half with 18 minutes left
to iead 47-35. 'Mark Aguirre, leading
DePaul with 24 points, accounted for

said,

DePaul
grabbed
its largest adfour
of the eight
points.
vantage, 72-47 with 7:33 left, with a

SAVE$ $

Luzin~

ski's thought that maybe a trade
would be best for him .

Church league results

ONE HANDER- Indiana's Dudley Bradley 17) puts up a onehanded shot as Seattle's Jack Sikma (43 I and Vinnie Johnson defend
on the play during the first half of their game Wednesday nlght in
Sea tie. Seattle won JOi;-93. I AP Lascrphoto I

Elementary
tournament
results given

Age group revisio"s will be
Tentative revisions of the age
groups participating in the Middleport Swnmer Youth Basebal
Program are to be discussed at a
meeting to be held at 7 p.m. Sunday
in the council room of Middleport
Village Hall.
Parents with children planning to
play ball this swruner are requested

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LARGE SELECTION OF ST't'LES
AND COLORS. SIZES 6-18.

BAHR CLOTHIERS
MIDDLEPORT ~

,

fj!!iiiiiiii~i~i~~iiii~~~~i

Casmg

Middleport - Harrison, Pomeroy
Tannehili, and Racine captured wins r-----------------------------1
Tuesday evening in the Meigs Coun·
ty Grade School Elementary Tournament being held at Meigs Junior
High SchooL
Harrisonville defeated Letart 3:&gt;31 in continuing action of the sixth
grade double elimination tournament. Leading scorers for the victorious Harrisonville team were
Jesse Howard with a game high 20
points, and teammate Charlie
Barrett with 11. Letart was led in
scoring by Joey Roush , flanked by
Gilbright with 10 points.
In the second game Pomeroy Tannehill easily defeated Tuppers
I
.
Plains No. I, 37 to 14. The winning
Pomeroy team was led by Huey
Eason's 19 points. followed by Rex
Haggy with 14. Jeff Jo~nson had 6,
and Matt Hensley had four points for
Tuppers Plains.
In another competitive hattie that
closed the evening's action, Racine
downed Rutland 3:&gt;-26. For Racine
Matt Harris netted ".!4 points and
Matthew Jewell zipped eight for the
winners. For Rutland Kent Eads had
II and Marty Hart had eight .
. Action reswnes tonight at 5:30
when Pomeroy Hysell will play
Bradbury Kitchen. At 7 p.m.
Syracuse will play Bradbury
Cassell, and at 8:30 Salisbury will
N 2nd AVE.
l
face Rutland .

LADIES' LEVI
BEN DOVER

-_-;;::::.--

.

$2Q95 ~~~eadable

to attend this meeting so they will be
well infonned of the changes.
Program officials state that it is imperative that more parents become
involved and interested in the
program and warn that lack of interest may cause the program to be
discontinued.

FOR SPRING

.

13", 14" &amp; 15"

discus.~ed

THE BEST FIT

:
:
:
·
'

layup by Clyde Bradshaw.
back in the second half, leading by
Guard Skip Dillard had 21 points siK points with about six minutes
for DePaul and scored 10 for 11 from left. Defiance's surge didn 't prove
the field .
nearly enough, however, and
Center Mike Kanieski earned 17 \VOmack's basket ended the match.
points for the Flyers, 17-10.
Donoher criticized his team's per- . - - - - - - - - - - - - formance ..
" We were down siJt at half, and we
,~
···---··· ..
-~""·fii!!IIM'•••
could have been down by only one,"
111111111 -~---..
hesaid.
FBRWrf!! e.u MN1CH 5 - J
In an NAJA District 22 championship game Wednesday night,
SCANNERS
•
Cedarville downed Defiance 80-78.
'I
Forward Mark Womack, earning 23
points , sunk the winning basket with
~'
one second left to clinch Cedarvme:s
.!!~.:!~~!~
.
triwnph.
.
--.J
Cedarville led by up to '11 points in
~·_-Jf;:j· ~.,-. 1-~.!·-~l
-the first half, claiming a 50-46 ad..,
vantage at the half. Defiance struck

RETREADS
After losing to Middleport First
Baptist iast week, RAcine United
Methodist rebounded with a win this
week over South Bethel. Ra cine
opened up a narrow halftime margin
to claim a 118-90 win.
Eddie " Bones" Roush ied the wiir
ners with 31 points. Johnny Davis
had 24, DAve "Big Red" Foreman
17, Bryan Wolfe 17, Robin Fortune
16, Scott Wolfe 11, and Jeff Sopher 2.
Leading South Bethel was Brian
Well with 25 points, followed by
Steve Milhoan with 21, Tim Smith 17,
Rob Barber 15, and Dave Baker two
points. Unofficially Racine UMC,
Middleport FBC, and Syracuse UMC
are deadlocked for first place ~ith 81 records. Middleport claimed a forfeit during last week's action .

Wolfe, Wade Connolly, Tony Deem, and Paul Harris.
Back row- Coach Bill Hensler, Tony Riffle, Corey MePhail, Dennis Teaford, Jason Hill, Kevin Curfman and
Trevor Cardone. The team received the tournament
championship trophy and individual Medallons.

DePaul tops Dayton, 84-64

brushing his hand over the letters.
" lt shouldn't matter if the
man~ger's name is Green , (Sparky)
Anderson, (Danny ) Olark , or (,John)
McNamara."
·
Rose was asked what hethough.t of

tremely sensitive to suggestions that
it may be approaching the same
road that Presidents John Kennedy
and Lyndon Johnson followed nearly
20 years ago when they first sent
teams of U.S. advisers to Saigon,
then counter-insurgency experts and
eventually American combat troops
to Vietnam.

Arms and the economy

win,"Rosesaid. " Theyhadalways
won on sheer talent. Now, they've
learned how to grind it out ... I think
it will carry over into this season."
Rose, who needs only 74 hits to
pass Stan Musial as the National
League leader in career hits, said he
didn't expect manager Dallas Green
to ease his tough approach in runnin~ the team.
" It's not his nature," Rose observed. "He was the big reason we
won this thing . II took him a long
time to gel through to some guys.
Some didn 't lOOk in the mirror until
September. I'm not going to name
names.".
·
Rose said the players finally
realized they were playing for a
team as well as themselves.
"My whole philosophy is playing
as a team. I have Philadelphia
across my

Administration sensitive about involvement
WASillNGTON (AP)- The words
rang a bell, as they rolled off the
tongue of the retired general, the
secretary of state.
"Wet season.'' "Country team."
"Military advisers. " They were part
of the lingo of the Vietnam War. But
now, the focus was El Salvador, and
Secretary of State Alexander M.

the Boilennakers, 16-9 overall and !17 in the Big Ten , to become Ohio
State's all-time oareer scoring
champion.
That would give him 1,991 points to
1,990 for Jerry Lucas, the current
leader. However, Lucas scored .his
total in three seasons. Williams has
used four years to attain his figure,
Russell Cross, a 1\-10 freshman
center, leads Purdue with a 17.5
point average. He is one of three
Boilermakers averaging in double
figures, being joined by 6-5 forward
Keith Edmonson's 17.4 mark and 1\-o
guard Drake Morris' 14.1.
Purdue beat Ohio State 7~5 in
their first meeting this season in
West Lafayette. However, the
Buckeyes have won the last three
games with the Boilermakers in
Columbus.

Rose drops complacency suggestion

L-------------------~

' We're not the blame
!:"

"compete with foreign firms comparably exposed to market stringencies."
That sentence is a beauty: According to free-market theory, the
countries not disciplined by market
competition should be patsies for us
tougher folk. Competition is supposed to make for efficiency, not
in~ficiency.
But here a conservative lets the cat out of the bag.
Others are not "fighting fair"
because they do not have our disadvantage - . which was sold to us in
the first place as an advantage.
AU right, grant the man's casual
denial of his own first premise why is it important, on that assumption, to protect our car industry?
Because "one in six jobs is related to
the auto industry." Which means
that six in six jobs are at the mercy
of foreign oil cartels. We are asked
to reinforce an economy that exposes us to gas cutoffs.
•
This argwnent tells us something
very scary abOut that Reagan
slogan. "reindustrialization." What
the protectionists want is to reinvent
the buggy. We are told that the
United States auto companies need
to be protected while they spend up
to $B(l billion on retooling. "That is
the largest private investment
program in history, far larger than
the Alaska pipeline, larger even
than the government's Apollo
program." Too large, tbat is; for
private means. We'll recommend a
little government subvention to go
with the protection, a kind of "Tory
socialism" (which I would call the

•

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�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, March 5,1981

.' ..,tW..

Stanhouse, Ford, Rudi begin

'

disabled list in 1980 and managed
just seven saves.
On Wednesday, he pitched batting
practice at the Dodgers' camp in
Vero Beach, Fla.
"His control was not as good as it
could be," said Coach Danny Ozark.
"But .for the first time out, he threw
well. He threw for 10 minutes and
threw quite freely."
Ford, a .290 hitter with 21 home
runs and 101 RBI in 1979, when
California won the AL West, underwent surgery for torn cartilage
following that season. He appeared
in just 65 games last year, hitting
.266.

Ford particpated in a baserunning
drill at the Angels' training facility
in Palm Springs, Calif., on Wed·
nesday, then said his knee " feel s

fine.
" It could be stronger, it still gets a
little sore at times," he added. "But
l'tl keep working with it and . it
should be no problem by the time the

season starts."

And Rudi, acquired by Boston
from the Angels in the deal that sent
Fred Lynn to California, hit.the ball
hard in his first shot at live pitching
at the Red Sox' camp. in Winter
Haven, Fla. Rudi had he.en restricted to hitting against a pitching
machine for two days because of a
strained right calf muscle.
" Rudi said he felt a lot better,"
Manager Ralph Houk said of the
veteran outfielder who hasn't been
at top form since he starred with the
championship Oakland A's teams of
1973-75. "However, we still want him

to take it easy for a couple of days.
We know what he can do. There's no
need to rush l}im."
Veteran outfielder Terry Whitfield
left the San Francisco Giants and
will join the Seibu Lions of the
Japanese league:
Montreal Expos right fielder Ellis
Valentine quit batting practice due
to an infected finger. Earlier, Valentine reiterated his desire to be
traded.
.
"It's not something that's just
going to blow over," he said. "!think
it's better if I get a fresh start with
another organization."
Cincinnati outfielder Dave Collins
finally reporteil to the Reds' Tampa
camp and officially was told he
would be moving to right field as
Ken Griffey took over in center.

College teams begin tourney action
By Associated Press
College basketball tournament
time, when losers sometimes
become winners·and vice versa, has ·
arrived.

tournament started today with lithranked Wake Forest matched again·
st Clemson and fourth-ranked
Virginia, the -ACC's regular seaso"t
champion, paired with Georgia
Tech, ().!4 during the regular season.
"Carolina is going to have "its hands full," said Coach Bill Foster of
Clemson. ''1 wouldn't-&amp;, surprised to
see that one go the other way."
Worthy, who averaged U points
and seven repounds a game, injured
his back last week: Perkins, North

First-round games will be played
tonight in five Division I conference
tournaments. with three other
leagues in the second round and four
others in the semifinals.
And then there are literally dozens
of other regional and district playoffs underway in the small college
divisions.
Carolina 's freshman starter at cen·
One place where upsets are the ter, sustained a bruised knee and
rule rather than the exception at the Budka, a reserve center, practiced
postseason tournament is the Atlan- Monday for the first time since su.f·
tic Coast Conference tournament, fering a leg injury on Jan. 22.
being played this year at Landover,
0!1 Wednesday ni ght , th e
Md.
, Southeastern Conference played the
Some observers feel 12th-ranked first round of its postseason tourNorth Carolina, seeded second in the nament, with Florida edging Auburn
ACC tournament that started at II 50-48 in overtime and Vanderbilt
a.m. today, could become an also- defeating Mississippi State 71-58.
ran because of three key injuries The SEC powerhouses, third·
!o James Worthy, Sam Perkins and ranked Louisiana State, No.7 KenPeteBudko.
tucky and No.IO Tennessee. had fir·
The Tar Heels face North Carolina st·round liyes. They get underway
State and Duke meets 20th-ranked tonight against Florida. Vanderbilt
Maryland in tonight's games. The and Mississippi, respectively.

Tournament games also will be
The only ranked team to play Wed·
nesday night was second-ranked played tonight in the Big East ConDePaul, which got 24 points from ference at Syracuse, N.Y.; the
Mark Aguirre as the Blue Demons Southwestern Athletic Conference at
pounded Dayton BU4.
Baton Rouge, La.; the Pacific Coast
In the first round of the Trans-Am Athletic Association at Anaheim,
Conference tournament at Calif.; the Metro Conference at
Shreveport, La., Samford drubbed Louisville. Ky.; the Southwest ConGeorgia Southern 73-57. The East ference at San Antonio, Texas; the
Coast Coast Conference tourney Missouri Valley Conference; the
started with American nipping Midwestern City Conference tour·
Drexel 62-&amp;1, Lafayette stopping nament; the ECAC Metro at UnionI ,ehigh 74-58, Rider beating Bucknell dale, N.Y.; and the ECAC North
63-50 and St. Joseph:s defeating tournament.
Temple 6().55.

Tournament scores
Ottlo H.S. Boys Baskrthlll
Wednesd"•y'a Re!ults
C iu~ AAA Touraamc=11l8
Akron North 64, Tallmadge 61
Bay 62 , Cloverleaf 58
C;:unbridge

J7,

Winter,svi lle 76, ZanesvaUe 74, M
Clau AA Touroameoll
an. McNicholas &lt;49, Cin . Reading 37
Clennont ~E 57, Ross :'J6
Wa ve rly 70, Well s ton 67, lOT
Ironton 56, Wheelerliburg 46

Nt'w . Philadelphia 56

Canton South 60, AlllanN! 44
Cleve. St. JOtiCpl'l 72. W. Gcaul!a 52
Cleveland II~ . 77, Nurdunia 65
Col. Central 53. Col. Whel:ltonc •9
Cui. We;tl&lt;md 47. Upper Arlington ~~
Da v. Kiser 72, Eatoo 6J
t.oiain Southview 61, Wesllake 31
Niles McKinley

:z,

Voun~ .

S. Range 64, Beaver Local 43
C.. 11 A Tourumenb
Badger 116, Bloomfidd 51
Canal
Winchester 8.1.
Am.11nda.Cl~lH·

East D. forfeit

Piqua 67, Te-cwr~ch 62
Warren Harding S2, Poland Seminary

crt&gt;ek 62
Cardington 70, Rtdgedale 5o4
(ndian Valley S. 56, Tuscarawas Cattl.
30

~

Peebles 81. HemJO(k Miller 61
Wurt hin~ t [m Christ, 60, Ben1e Union 45
7.~nt's . Rusecnms 67, Indian Valley N.

""
..

Ohio H.S. Glrlt S.lkelball
Wednuday'll ReiUIIB
Class AAA Toomameot.s

Cenlervtll e 37, Fainmmt W. 33
Cin. Colerain 67, Hamilton 57
Cin. Oak Hilb 72. Cin. Prinl-eton :M
Col. Northland 65, Westerville S. 32
Oa f , Patterson ~. Miamisburg 26
Day. Stebbins ~. Xenia 24
Newark 61 , C~»L Mifnm ~9
Class A.A Touruamea&amp;s
Belle(ontaine M, Milton-Union ta
Brn:bville SG, V011ley Forge 46
C.11nlon Central Cath . 611 , Loudonvllle 58
Claymont 79, · Ton~nto Z7

Doylestown 60, E. Canton 5I
Graham 48, Urbana 42
Mentor 53 , Eastlake N. 41
St. Clatr:;v\Jie 47, Tri·Valley 4~
Clan A ToumarMnll

l.vrili.1nwn 41 , Columbiana Crestview J.4
Mapleton 39, SOUthington 31
Pleasant 63, J ohnstown Northridt!e 3S
River Val. ~. Col. Ready 43
Otdo Collell" Blaketbllll
NAIA Dltt. U T01.1n.meol
Cbllmplo111hlp
Cedt:trvllle M, Defiance 1ft
0\MrGamel
DePaul 14, Dayton 64

LEBANON RESULTS
LEBANON, Ohio (API - Sunrise
Pebbles slogged through a muddy
stretch run Wednesday night to win
the $1,000 featured pace mile in
2:13.3-5 and paid $6.40, $2.80 and
$2.20.
Trying To Do placed, $2.60 and
$2.00. There was a dead heat for
third place. Greed Gal paid $2.40 and
Heat Cupid Star, $2.20.
Silver Love and Busy Frisco combined 2-3 In the double fo~ $33. The
mutuel pool totaled $106,995 and the
attendance was 1,016.
BUTTNER JOINS REDS - Larry BUttner, flrst man the Cincinnati Reds have signed as a free agent through the re-entry dra.ft
system, Is watched by rookies as he fields grounders· at first base
during first day of spring training drills for the full Cincinnati Reds
squad. In background looking on are, from left, rookies Torn Lawless,
German Baranca and Nick Esasky. (AP Laserphoto)

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GIRLS' CHARACTERS:

) MIDD~EPORT DEPT.
STORE

ajppears successful

this winter convinced the five--time

Gold Glove winner that an intricate
operation had eliminated the numbing pain in his elbow that made him
miserable in 1980.
" I knew I was going to be better,"
Concepcion said Wednesday during
the Reds first full squad workout.
Doctors removed calcium deposits
from his elbow last October and
repositioned a nerve that sent a
numbing pain up his ann whenever
he threw. Concepcion said the
problem also hindered his batting
swing, contributing to his .260
average last season.

Gold Glove this season as proof his
ann is sound.
'" I should have won it last year
too," he said. " I had one of my best
years fielding. I only made 16 errors
in !56 games. I could not throw the
hall hard but I made all of my
assists.''

Concepcion also relied on one of
his own discoveries to ease the bur·
den on his ann - the one-hop throw
to first base on artificial surfaces.
• He plans to use the manuever this
year whenever ground balls take
him deep into the hole between tile
. shortst6p and third baseman.
Concepcion anticipates the biggest
in1provement in his hitting. Playing
designated hit(er this-,jointer helped
him overcome the initial" fear of
testing the elbow in the batters box.
BASKETBAU. TOURNAMENT
SLATED
The Middleport Alumni
Association will sponsor a men's
basketball tournament. Th9Se in·
terested in participating are asked
to contact either Celesta Bush at 992·
5943 or Ann Johnson, at 99)!-2990 after 6 p.rn. The entry fee of $60 must
be in by March 9. Trophies will be
awarded.
'

'Td feel pain at night,'' said Con•
cepcion, who played with a rubber
sleeve last season to keep the elbow
wann. " Every morning when I got
up, my fingers were numb.
"I've had the problem the last few
years. I would have to get two or
three cortisone shots lor it. I was
.-----------getting tired of getting them."
Concepcion played first base and
designated hitter on his winter
SPRING
baseball club. He said the ann has
been sore but not like it was before
the operation was perfonned by orthopedic surgeon Dr. Frank Jobe .
Size Infant to 14
"I feel like I'm 90 percent
(back)," Concepcion said. "It's still
sore from the surgery and from not
throwing the ball for so long a
period.
" But It doesn't bother me the way
it used to. It's still a little nun1b from
the surgery,"
:. ·~
Ironically, the 32-ycar-old shortstop doesn't think the painful elbow
hindered his fielding very much last
111 W. 2nd
Pomeroy, Oh.
season. He said he'd like to win the

JEAN SALE

20% OFF

,,
KIDDIE SHOPPE

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TOPS

$13.00·$21.00

BOYS' CHARACTERS:

R2-D2 - WONDER WOMAN
- CJPO

Concepcion's surgery

$8.99-$17.99

$344
SUPERMAN BOBA FEn
FLASH
1 DARTH VADER
/
GREEN LANTERN

FIRST DAy BLISTERS- Dave Collins, Cincinnati Reds regular
outfielder, receives first aid for bliSters on his hands after be took batting practice at first day of spring training workouts In Tampa MIDday. Joe Young, left, Judiaoapolls farm club trainer puts gauze over
Injury, It was the first day of training for the full squad. tAP Laserphoto!

CLEAR THE WINTER RACKS SALE
~]

UN DEROOS

r

TAMPA , Fla. (AP )- Theground
ball skittered his way. Finally, Dave
Concepcion's surgically · revived
ann would get a test.
The Cincinnati Reds shortstop
gloved the ball and threw crisply
from his first base position to set a
double play in motion. That simple
toss in a Venezuelan league game

Denim &amp; Corduroy

JEANS
20% OFF

TWO'S

sss. 99·$78. 99

March 5,1981

PQmeroy-Middteport, Ohio

Food, drug, cosmetic .
program. offering of
.Meigs Extension office

~;,.

hard work toward comebacks
By The Associated Press
A trio of veterans who couldn't
find their way out of the infinnary
last year began comeback attempts
Wednesday. If .they succeed, their
teams just might find themselves in
a very healthy situation - as pennant contenders.
Relief pitcher Don Stanhouse of
the Dodgers and outfielders Dan
Ford of the Angels and Joe Rudi of
the Red Sox worked out with varying
degrees of success. But, this early in
spring 'training, just the fact that
they were back in action was good
news for their clubs.
Stanhouse, the ace reliever of the
American League champion
Baltimore Orioles . in 1979, signed
with Los Angeles as a free agent
prior to last season. But he apprared
in just 21 · games while on fho

Thurs~ay,

Rely On Our
·Expert Advice
Need help selecting an over·
the-counter medicine? As phar·
m;u.:ists, we may be abk co help
you choose what's best. Ask us!

" Cun-ent Issues in Food, Drugs
and. CoSmetics" will be held on
Tuesday, March 17th.
Sponsored by the Meigs County
Cooperative Extension Service, the
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. program will
feature presentations by Ruth
Weisheit and Theresa Hoog, Consumer Affairs officers, Food and
Drug Administration. Location of
the activities will be the Meigs County Multipurpose Building (Senior
Citizens Center) on Mulberry
Heights in Pomeroy.
The IpOrnlng session will begin at
10 a.m. with a discussion of "The
Confuslnfl World of Food Additives."
"Unscrambling Food Labels" will
include general food labeling information and the pros ar•d cons of
generic or no-name brands.
For lunch, bring a brown bag or
enjoy a meal of slOppy joes, relish
plate, potato chips, jelo salad, coffee
or tea for a fee of $2.50.
At I p.m. the afternoon session.will

Formulas for Funl

To

Drugs, Sundries

•
SW:5HER

LOHSE

D. C., on Save the Children Day,
BY BETH STONE
May I.
Special correspondent
Children participating in this
(Copyright Beth Stone 1981
national campaign arc being asked
' Dear Beth,
•· I have a fourth grader who cannot to write letters on the theme: "Dear
'·seem to learn to tell time to an ""old President Reagan : This is the
fashioned" clock because she biggest problem facing families
·always reads our digital clocks. We today, and here's what should be
have promised to get her a watch as done about it ... " The letters are to
: soon as she can tell lime on a regular be mailed to Save the Children Day
clock, but even with that incentive, '81, Westport, Conn. 06880, so that
she seems to be unable to learn. D: the leading concerns can be tallied
and swrunarized into the 1981
you have any suggestions?
Children's Agenda for Action.
Dear Reader,
This is the fourth consecutive year
Use a paper plate as a clock face,
··and print the nwnbers around it. Cut Save the Children has invited
out hands from construction paper children to join a national letter' and attach them to the center with a writing campaign as part of the Save
' metal brad so they can turn easily. the Children Day ohaervance. Last
'·Have the chi'd practice, matching year, more than 20,000 letters from
children in a~nost every state were
' various times to digital readings.
This problem of today's presented to the U. S. Senate Subyoungsters being unable to read committee on Child and Human
yesterday's docks is quite conunon . Development during a . special
A new electronic toy by TIGER hearing for children.
Save t~e Children .conducts
Eleectronics has been develoPed to
· teach pre-schoolers· to correlate the programs assisting impoverished
" digital arid face times through a toy children in 25 countries around the
computer marketed by the name world including the United States. It
OWLY MUSICAL NUMBE.JlS. With is anticipated that govemors of
'it the child quickly learns to tell every state will declare May I Save
' time. There are three other nwnber the Children Day and call upon
· games on the toy that teach children to make this a special day
repeating nwnbers, counting and to help other children.
For an activities booklet
identifying which line (in writing a
describing this national letternumber) is missing.
Readers, there is still time to enter writing campaign and other Save
our contest. Send your ideas on · the Children Day activities, write
anything pertaining to children · National Coordinator for Save the
before March 2. Best adult entry will Children Day, Save the Children,
receive $25 and best child entry will Dept. P, Westport, cr 06880 or catl
receive $15. The ideas need only be toll free (1100 I 243-5075.
Teachers are encouraged to make
on a postcard if you wish. Any aspect
of child-rearing or teaching .or en- this a class project. Letters should
tertaining should be sent. Send as be mailed by the first part of April so
• many ideas as you wish. They do not they can be tallied in time.
have to be unusual ideas, just
' whatever works in your horne will
also work for other families . Hurry
and send your ideas today to Beth
Stone, P. 0. Box 1061, Paris, Texas
75460. We reserve the right lo edit
, letters and they become the proper·
ty of Beth Stone.
Dear Beth,
Save the Children, . the internlltional child-assistance agency,
'' Reflections of His Love.' • a new
is inviting children from across the film highllghting the life and
country to voice their opinions in let- ministry of Joni Eareckson, will be
ters to the President of the United shown on Sunday, March 8, at the
States. The letters will be presented, Pomeroy United Methodist Church,
along with oral testimony · from
112 E. Main St. The color feature,
children, at a special hearing with produced by World Wide Pictures,
government leaders in Washington, the film ministry of the Billy
Graham Association, will be shown
once, beginning at 7:30 p.tn.
The Duily Sentinel
Miss Eareckson is the star of a
recent theatrical motion picture,
IUlli'S 111-. . 1
A Oh-ltlot Gf Multlmfdja, Ia~ .
"Joni", which relates the story &lt;1 .
her diving accident, as a young girl,
Publbhed every •fternoon ucept Sw1eiay,
M-y tllrough Friclayllll C011rl Sir«~ by
which left her paralyzed from the
the Ohio Valley Pub 1ahh'l (OfllPIIIY •
neck down. It chronicles her
Multimedia, Inc.. Pcmero)l, Ohio t$?8t,
tt2~2156 . Second class poeta!Je pild at
struggles to piece together her lifa
Ptlmeroy, Ohio.
and her faith in God, in spite of the
Member: 1l"le Aasodat~ Preas, Inland Daidevastating circumstances.
ly Press AMociaUon and the American
In "Reflections of His Love", Miss
Newspaper Publisher&amp; ~bltloo, Natl0011l
Adverllaing Repretentattve, l..arldtns
Eareckson, who is also the author of
~lalea, 3101 Euclid Ave .. Cleveland,
two best-selling books, "Joni" and
Ohlo.Ulll.
"A Step Further~' tells of the great
POSTMASrtR: Send addre~ lo 'T'be Dally ·
transfonnations
that have taken ·
Sentinel, 111 Court St.., Porn~ roy. Ohio~769 .
place in her life because of her
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
willingness to accept all of the things
ly Carrier or Motor R•lf
Oneweek .............. ; ..... , ... .. tt .OO
that have happened to her.
011• Monlh .......... ." ............ .. $UI
The publlc is Invited.
One Year . . .. . . ............... ~2 . 10

...... "............... ..

ICIIflflettiMccun.up, 1 . ""·

CNr••• a 11111, a . Pft.

MOI'I , ,_,.. Sai. I :M e. m. totp,,...
Suf!CJ41y ll :•to II ' H 1M lktp.ln ,
Plt.SCIIPTIONI
PH. HJ·HU
flrlfllclly Serviu

OINfll "'lflll' tilt

Pom•nv, 0 .

ASTRO I

GRAPH
Mllrebtl,lllll
Thi:i cumin!! year you are likely to be far more
arnb\tloll!l than you hll¥e been in tht p&amp;.'it. You'll
know what you want and you'U ~ prepared to
work hard to brinl( yotir desires Into being.
PISCF..~ IF~b . 20-MIII'l'b !fU it's not that yuu
won 't be arnbitiou!f today - It's that you may
chllnool your efforts in the wrong direction . The
succesti you ht&gt;pe to achieve could thus elude you .
Find out more 11buut what's in liWre ror you by
sending !or your A:~lro-Graph, P. 0. B\)!1: 489.
R.tidio City Station, New YOI"k, N. Y. 10019. 81!
!lure lu specify birth da~ .
ARIES !March U·April 19) Be careful tOday
!.hit you don't ~tep out of character lllld permit
the t:reen-eyed monster of envy to dfect your
thinkin~ . JealoUsy isn 'tyour style.
TAURUS (April rt-May ZCH If you are HI i1
gathering tod.lly where lrielllls are Mying unkind
lhinj.!s Ybout a pa l who ilm'l prt&gt;sent, you'd be
wise to eJtpre!ls your own views.
GEMINI (MI)' !I·JIIae !0) Vour Objedlves
must be clearly defined today, or confwion
nU~ht enter the picture. That which c(}uld be
01chitved may .slip by the boards.
CANCER fJIUtr U·July HI Other.~ c.11nnut be
expected tn ~uppiirt ym.1r VifW!I or opinions today
if they feel you don't totally be\lev.e in them .
Take a finn position.
L.EO (July ~Aug. %%1 Joint conunerctal ven·
tun~:~ t'UUid be a trine trickier today than W!Ual.
Take step:i to protect YIXlr intere:1ts as v.·.-11 a:i of
lhuse with whom you're involvai.
\'IRG() IAUfl . 2.3-&amp;pt. !tl Under pressure
loWly you ('()u\d make conces.sions or corn·.
mitments which may not serve your best in·
tcre~u . Start nt~~neuvcring if yuu feel you're
belntt btlcked inttlil et~mer .
I.IBRA l&amp;pt ZS.OCt. ZSI Co-workers rnu:il be
handled with lr.id gloves tQd.Hy or you may lnad·
vertently do something which they l'OUid Lake of.
fense al that yoo'd have a hard time rectifying.
SCORPIO j()ct, U.Nov. !II Guard atjain.sl1rn·
pul:live spt!ndin[!: today and alsu be careful how
you de11l with friendll :~oclally . In some unique
11wnner the:~.- two influences may neMatively
overl51p.
SAGmARIUS !Nov. U.Det. UJ You kMw
whllt need:! doing today and you urea ~ood starter, but your inct:fltlve Ctltlld wane and you 11\ll)'
f~tde In lhe home stretch. Be tenaclou.1.
CAPRICORN 1Dec. U·J•a. Ill Say nOthing of
Mnyttne today which yoo wouldn't lik!! s.ald nf
yuurself. This pertains particularly to a .cl~e
lrumd whose feelln~s.are easily hurt.
AQUARlUS IJ.-n , N-Fcb. 191 This is not 1 ~uod
day to do Hll)' dt!ficil spending . l).m't blow fu11d:1
which you hopt: to hilve, but which aren't yet in
your hilnds .

Contributions noted

Subscrlbl!u not de.slrl~iji to PIIY the carrier
may remit In t~dvaitce dlre&lt;:t lo The Ollily
SentUwl oo ll 3, 6 or 1Z month buts. Credit
wlll be ilven carrier each rnooth .

Olltoaacl Wett Vlr&amp;IDJII
3Monlh .............. . .....•...•.
Six month ........................
1 Year ..... ........ 1 • • • • • • • • • • • • •
' Ratel O.talde Ohio
ud Well Vlrltala
l Month , .. . . , ................ , ...
6 Mooth ..........................
1 Year ... ... ; .. ,, , , , .............

,
$10.50

'17 .~
t;l3 .00
111.110
$20.110
$31.00

Family night will be observed at
at Middleport Heath United
Methodist Church Sunday, March 8,
with a carry-in supper.
The Rev. Robert Robinson will use
as his theme ·"The Meaning of
Lent.'' Each family is requested to
bring six pictures of their family.
Activities begin at 6 p.m. The public
is invited to attend.
Sunday's sennon is enti\led " Will
You Be Ready for Easter?". Sunday
worhsip services re at 10:30 a.m.

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE TRISTATE AREA

World Day of
Prayer Friday
World Day of Prayer will be observed by Church Women United of
Meigs County at 1:30 p.m. Friday at
the Enterprise United Methodist
Church.
"The Earth is the Lord's" will be
the theme of the service which has
been prepared by Christian
American Indian women. Meigs
County women will join with w.omen
of over 150 countries around the
world in the observance.

Joy Black, six year old daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Lynn Black,
Hartford, W. Va., recently won nine
trophies in a baton contest held in
Columbus.
She won the high point trophy for
scoring the most points and received
trophies in fancy strut, visitor's solo,
military strut, parade majorette,

Investiture March 10
An investiture and rededication
ceremony was planned for March 30
at the Riverboat Room of the
Diamond Savings and Loan Co.
when Middleport Girl Scout Troop
1039 met Tuesday evening. Plans

Miss February, basic strut, open
solo, and .best appearing.
Joy has been twirling com·
petiti.vely for only nine months and
has won 44 trophies and eight
medals. She received the West
Virginia State Novice Solo champion
and the West Virginia State Basic
Strut Champion.

TO SPEAK SUNDAY
Ron Lindeman, Kentucky
Chnstian College student, will speak
again this Sunday at the Bradbury
Church of Christ, 10 :30 morning wor·
shio.
,------~~ ----::-:::::-

r--·-~;"7·~·,-;;~~~~~----l­

i
!
1
1
1
I
I
I

Florist Since 1 ~57
· I
Girl Scout week, March 11-14, and
~
posters to be displayed in Mid·
!
dleport were completed.
./L~
I
A scout window display will be
FLO R 1ST
!
featured at the Sewing Cent.er in
PH. 992 _
1
2644
Middleport. Amy Luckeydoo and
!
The Roy Joseph Trio of Por- Mindy Spencer served refreshJ52 E. Mo•n , ro meroy
tsmouth will be appearing Friday ments.
¥our FTC Florist
!
and Saturday night 'at the Mid- , - - - - - - - - -· ---'--,...--_-_-_-_-_·------------'
dleport United Pentecostal Church,
7:30p.m.
The Rev. Dennis Burns will be
sJ)ea'king on Friday and Saturday
evening. On Sunday morning the
Gospel Ho-Downers will perfonn
and Danny Richards will preach,
while on Sunday evening, the Rev.
William Knittel will speak.
The public is invited to attend all
of the services.

were made for the observance of

Trie to entertain

_-'

,

COM,NG SOON!

The Roy joseph Trio

Slinderelh meets
Mrs. Debbie Fink was recognized
for a weight loss of 75 pounds and
was taken into the slim and trim
program of Slinderella at last
week's meeting held at the Diamond
Savings and Loan Co.
·
Six new members were welcomed
at the meeting and recognition was ·
given to Regina Erlewine who lost
the most weight with Becky Shaffer
and Charlotte Erif~wine tying for
runner-up.
At the Mason class one new member was welcomed. Melissa Hoffman lost the most weight and Francis Oliver was runner-up. At the
Thursday night Chester class held at
the fire station, Maxine Jordan and
Teresa Whitlock tied for the most
weight lost and Brenda Holsinger

MIDDLEPORT UNITED PENTECOSTAL CHURCH

March 6th &amp; 7th • 7:30P.M.

~· ~~ ~"'-·
~ ~&lt;..e-fb.C.,;'C&gt;~ll; Rev. D.ennis Burns
~\.~&gt;$&gt;~

\)'~&lt;,\;. ."'~

Speaal Speaker

YOU'LL
LOVE
OUR
LEATHERTOPPED
SUNWEAR
COLLECTION!

MASON FURNITURE

Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday &amp; Saturday
0

OPEN e~~~~o~~~;· ;;u;;;~~~~~~~; ~NLY
~ 711-,;~?HERMAN GRATE
Mason, W.Va.

l

Wins 9--count 'em trophies!

Family night Sunday

SHOP

~

Joy BUick

$

.b&gt;-b"-&gt;&lt;:00~---~·~-

No subacrlpUorw by mall pennltted In towM
where home curler servle11la available .

Dr. Bailes said anyone who enjoys sports should be certain
these vision skills are checked
when they have an optometric
examinatio11. If skills are lacking
or lagging, prescription lenses,
vision therapy or both may be
used to bring them up to par.
Although sports 'performance
ril.ay not always give dues to a
need for vision care, Dr. Bailes
said some things to look for are
frequently missing easy plays;
squinting; inconsistent per·
forrnance from game to game;
and difficulty playing under
lights indoors and outdoors.
Contact lenss provide the subject matter for the fourth in a
series of articles presented by the
Tri-county Optometric Society in
observance of national Save Your
Vision Week.
People, not eyes, are the major
cuase of problems for contact
lens wearers, a Gallia County optometrist has said.
':Most eyes can adapt to contacts but you are asking for
trouble if the lenses are not
properly fitted, kept clean or
worn for more hours than recommended," said Dr. Bailes,
spokesman for the Tri-county Optometric Society.

Middleport, Oh. 45760
S. 3rd St.
Contributions to the Ohio Valley
Rev. William Knittel , Pastor
Christian Camp and the Grundy
Mountain Mission School were 1!11lde
when the Martha Bible Class met
Monday night a the Bradbury Chur·
ch of Christ.
Paula Haynes presided at the
meeting during which time the purchase of a new coffee maker was approved and plans for the interior
.
fb."'redecoration of the church
discussed. Contributions are being was runner·up. One new member
was welcomed . .
receive on the carpet fund.
COME AND BRING A FRIEND
Mrs. JoAnn Newsome is lecturer
Plans were made to give to a
and
information
on
classes
may
be
needy family in the area through a
special collection to be taken Sun- obtained from ·her at 992-3382.
day. Larry Haynes had devotions. ~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Bill and Naomi King served refresh- I
ments.

SINGLE COPY
PRICilS

1\IAILSUBSCRIPTIONS

Phormocy

Part of a series of articles
presented by the Trio(!Oullty Optometric Society to celebrate
Save Your Vision Week has to do
with sports and vision.
In sports, when practice
doesn't make perfect or bring
even a glimmer of Improvement,
look to the eyes for the trouble
spot. .
"The name of just about every
game is keeping your eyes on the
ball, puck, pins, clock, opponents,
teammates and playing area
boundaries," said Dr. Bailes,
spokesman for the Tri-county Op- .
tometrlc Society in another Save
Your Vision Week message.
It takes 20-00 eyesight and
many other vision skills to do that
fast and accurately with
minimum energy expended.
Those other skills include
abilities to see out of the corner of
the eye; see sharply and clearly
at a distance when you, the opponent or ball are in motion;
quickly and accurately judge
distances between yourself and .
the oppOnent, ball, target or
boundaries; use the eyes to follow
a moving object smoothly and
easily, and coordinate hand, foot
and body movements with what
the eyes see.

Trouble with 'old-fashioned' clock

Dally .......................... 15Cents

COATS
$30

feature "Pilill, I'Otlons and FoodsMix with Care", emphasizing the
topics of generic drugs and food·
drug Interactions. "Cosmetics Let's Face the Facts", will highlight
current issues relating to cosmetic
labeling, with the program adjourning by 3 p.m.
To register for the program,
please send your name, address and
$1 registration fee per person plus
$2.50 with lunch - total $3.50. Mail
befo,re Tuesday, March 10 to the
Meigs County Cooperative Ex·
tension Service, Box 32, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769. For additional information, call614-992.{;696.
All educational programs and activities conducted by the Meigs
County Cooperative Extension Ser·
vice are available to all potential
clientele on a non-discriminatory
basis without regard to race, color,
national origin, sex, or religious af·
filiation.

New film
featured
a{ church

ll1 1

Save Your Vision Week-Dr. Bailes offers tips

~~~~~~~~~~~QW

I

Mll'!!llEPORT

heritage house
OF SHOES

�Thursda

Pa e-6 The Dail Sentinel

UMW plans March workshop Carpenter
ATHENS - Athens District
United Methodist Women will spon·
sor a " workshop" for all United
Methodist Women, Officers and
Chairpersons, March 11, from 10
a.m. until 2:30 p.m., with
registration and coffee hour starting
at 9:30a.m., in the Rockland United
Methodist Church, Belpre, Ohio.
District President, Mrs. Everett

Personals

McMahon, urges all officers and
chairpersons to attend, to learn what
the o£fice is all a bout, and how to be
instrumental in bringing about an
even better understanding of the
"purpose of the United Methodist
Women."
Those attending should brmg a
sack lunch. Nursery will be provided
at the church.

"The telephone, its many changes
and the future, " was the topic of
discussion led by a telephone em·
ployee, when Colwnbia Grange No.
2435 held its January meeting. The
discussion, led by Eldon Barrows,
was very informative. Instructions
for the National Grange Sewing
Project will be discussed at the
January session.
Celia Irwin, Marysville, and Dawn
Walker, Thurman, spent a day with
their fath er, Dale Dye. Murl
Gala way also was a guest at the Dye
home.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Allan Byrd and Elsie
Sizemore, Nitro, W. Va. spent a day
with their niece, Mrs. Linda Dye and
family.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Oxley included Mrs. Dale Stansbury, local, Teresa Sclunidt and
daughters, Pennsylvania, Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Eugene Turner and son,
Chad, Pickerington, and Lawrence
Oxley, Columbus.

Community Builders meet
To receive diploma
Toni Marie Hudson of Racine is
one of the career graduates who will
receive a diploma from Patricia
Stevens Career College in
Milwaukee in commencement exer·
cises to be held March 14 at the
Bradley Pavilion of the Perfonning
Arts Center.
The commencement address will
be delivered by retired Wisconsin
Supreme Court Juslice R&lt;&gt;bert W.
Hanson.
·
Miss Hudson is the daughter of
Mrs. Blondena M. Hudson, Racine,
and a 1980 graduate of Southern
High School. She will graduate from
the nine-month accredited fashion
merchandising course at Patricia

Stevens Career College.
;'Pete·s Dragon," a Walt Disney
movie, will be shown at 2 p.m. Sun·
day afternoon at the Middleport
Elementary School. Cost of the
movie which is open to students and
parents is $1 per person. Refresh·
ments will be sold. The movie is
sponsored by the PTA.
IRST LENT SERVICE
F
The first of six ecumenical lenten
services will be held at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday evening at the Pomeroy
Seventh Day Adventist Church on
Mulberry Heights with the Rev.
William Middleswarth, pastor of the
St. Paul Lutheran Church, as
speaker.

The Comunity Builders Club met
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Whitehead Saturday evening.
Business session was conducted by
the president, Ronald Osborne. Mrs.
Denver Weber was reappointed
chainnan of the community flower
fund. A donation was made to the
Tuppers Plains Emergency Service.
During the social hour delicious
refreshments were served to Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Myers, Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Osborne, Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Hannwn, Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Warren
Pickens, Mr. and Mrs. Denver
Weber and guests, Mr. and Mrs.
Lyle Balderson by the hosts, Mr. and
Mrs. Whitehead. The next meeting
will be at t~e Weber home.

•,

Sticky glue. spots

in its TV premiere.
"Evita," NBC's made-for-TV
biography of Eva Peron, got off to a
good start in its two-nlght I,"Uil. Part I
was lOth, but the concluding chapter
finished 35th.

CBS' rating for the week was 21.6
to 17.5 for NBC and 17.3 for ABC. The
networks say that means in an
average prime-time minute during
the week, 21.6 percent of the nation's
TV-equipped hOmes with. television
were tuned to CBs.
"Miracle on Ice,'' ABC's niadeThe rating for "60 Minutes" was
for-television
dramatization of the
30.8, six-tenths of a point ahead of
U.S.
Olympic
hockey
team's victory
"Dallas." Nielsen says that means
Lake
Placid
last
year,
l)'as 27th
at
of all the nation 's homes with TV,
for
the
week,
while
another
NBC
30.8 percent saw at least part of the
film,
the
loosely
biographical
"Elvis
show.
The second-place finish for NBC and the Beauty Queen," was No. 38. ·
NBC had two shows among the
was the network's first after three
,five
least-watched, "The Gangster
weeks in the No.3 position.
CBS, which leads the competition Chronicles" in 58th place, and
for the season to date, got some help "Great Disasters of the World'' 62nd
in the most recent week surveyed - last. CBS' "Flo" was , 59th,
from the movies, "Fallen Angel," followed by two ABC shows which finished third, and " The "Charlie's Angels" and "Foul
Amityville Horror," which was No.5 Play."

Fairview NewsNotes---------

Langsville

Syracuse : Mr. and Mrs. Bill Parsons
Dan Livingston attended his
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
·Ernest and Flossie Bush visited
and sons of Antiquity.
aunt's, Barbara Livingston's funeral
Don and Joyce Manuel, daughters Mr. and Mrs. Russell Cline at
of North Carolina Saturday.
Don ita and Robin, visited Mr. and Syracuse Monday and Mr. and Mrs.
Thanksgiving Day guests of Mrs.
Mrs. Mary Hobstetter, Mrs. Alice
Mrs. Charles Pyles a! Racine.
Arnold Hupp and Mr. and Mrs. Ed· Etha Warner were Arthur and Janet
TO END MARRIAGES
Livingston and Mrs. Mae Crouser
_ ErrcLawsonofSyracusespentthe d.Jc Hupp an d son, J eremy, Sun day Warner, Lisa Smith, Clarence and
Donna Handley, Rt. 1, Langsville, made a trip to Charleston W. va.
weeken d w1t· h hi s · aunt, wilda aft ernoon.
Inez Roy, Nancy Roy, Dan
filed suit for divorce in Meigs County Saturday,
1..awson.
Mrs. Ed'1t h Manue J ·IS a medi ca 1 Houdashelt, Ray Roy, Gay Ghenter,
Common Pleas Court against
Mrs. Dan Poole and sons of Colum·
Arthur and Janet Warner of patient at Veterans Memorial all of Racine and Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt
Charles Jackson Handley, Rt. 1,
Ra· cme
· were d"mner guests Tuesday Hospital.·
bus were weekend guests of Mr. and
Ferguson of Point Pleasant.
Langsville.
Mrs. Dan Libingston.
of his mother, Mrs. Etha Warner.
New Year's guests of Mr. an~. Mrs.
Mrs. Elvira Barr and Mr. and
Amanda and Michael Russell Charley Lawson and Wilda were
M. Barbara Hackett was granted
a divorce from George William
Mr. and Mrs · Joe Manuel and son •
Mrs. Mike Barr visited Mrs. Flossie
spent Sa turday evening with their Harold and Mar 1ene La· wson, son
Hackett, III, and Anthony L. Cole
d
Is
M
d
M
R
c
J
f
Le
t
w
v
Ed
d
TiJn
Phillips at the Health Care Center of
gran paren , r. an
rs. ussell
. ., o
tar , . . a.;
an
,, visited Mr. and Mrs. Robert
from Glenna J. Cole.
R h
D'
L
E ·
f BaJ'lev at Long Bottom.
r - - - - - - - - -----Lo_g_a'_'·_O_h_io_S_u_n_da_y_._ _ _ _ _ _ _o_us_·_._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _'a_n_e__a_w_so_n_._s_on_ _r_lc__o_ _ _'_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Fri., Sat Sun.
Sale

Open Daily 10·9
sundays 1·6

- - - - - - -.. .tor down-to-earth prices
'

UME
.I

SO \.BS.

( 146)

. I

( 147)

( 148)

Our Reg . 3. 97

Pkg · Our 1.83

Our Reg. 1.27

5" Hanging Baskets

Spring Bulbs

Agricultural Ume

A variet¥ of bulbs for spr·

50 pounds Nt. Wt.

Lovely potted plants in 5"
hanging baskets.

ing planting . Save,

2

( 149)

FOR

AMEAICAN SEfD

$}

Our Reg. 34c to 54c

( 151l

Our Reg . 9lc pots.

6" Clay Pols
Handy planter pots 'Of
clay . Use for garden or in·
doors.
Saucers ( 150) 2 for 88c

Pkg,

Garden Seed Special
Varieties of vegetable
seed and flower seeds.

Boys'&amp;

Students'
Lee Rider®
Jean

&amp;

Lee Rider· Jea n-bui lt tough to
take it rough ! The Rider Jeans
features a lean stra ight leg
silhouette, back ·pockets with
curve,

scoop

front

pockets . Right front pocket has
watch pocket. L ee · logo patch
on back waistband . Ava ilable in
14 oz , 100% Cotton I nd igo dyed
Lee Set'' denim and a wide
variety

of

other

color s

w. ...

'lNM vcua. GMJ)£!16W:Itr
IDEAL P'Oft .. .•

t.,.rc,.,. u...,.,..,an-"'..

~

.iiiiiiii.l
• ,.,,.,.

rl,llff1'l,. f l -t:t

·~ o~·~o" •t •t .co 1110~• · \0'

(154)

'"

and

(156)

( 152)
Our Reg . 1.47

Our Reg . 1.47

3 DAYS ONLY!

3 DAYS ONLY!

1.09

1.09

Top Soil

Organic Peat

Top dresing soil is rich in
humus. Ideal for patching,
potting, planting .

Kmart brand peat in big 40
lb. bag. Retains moisture
and enriches soil.
.

'

I

Helen Help Us
'

This·friend really knows
how to age a person. • •
BY HELEN IIO'ITEL
10. If you're 50ish, better not say,
"You remind me of my mother
SWial oorrespoadeat
DEAR HELEN:
(father)/' Unless your aging friend
I didn't send Christmas cards last is over'70.
year, but instead wrote notes to old
11. Keep in mind that many longfriends in February.
lived people may see others as old,
Today I received a letter from one but not themselves. Don't bring it to
of them. It started: " I'm pleased their attention. Forget the phrase,
and surprised to hear frllll you "Senlor Citizens,'' "Goldenyear
because when 1didn't get your usual Group," etc.
holiday card, I figured you'd died."
12. And don't take for granted that
True, I'm 72, but far from packing all elders are ultra-convetsative,
it in. In fact, I've just got me a new youth-hating reactionaries. Their
lady friend.
viewp6lnts often remain more
Please print this as a remainder flexible than their bodies. - H.
I
on how not to "age" a person,
HALE, HEARTY AND AUVE
DEAR HELEN:
DEARH.H.ANDA:
We four children are grown. Some
of
our blood types are the same, but
Gladly!
And here, for the tactless, are all differ from that of our father. We
more pointers on approaching age only learned this recently when, af·
ter an accident, we were told we
(in others) gracefully :
I. Treat' the older person as a con- couldn'tgiye him blood.
OUr mother acts very upset when
temporary not as someone to be
pampered or venerated (unless of we ask her blood type, and won't tell
course it's expected, in which case us. She says we shouldn't bother Dad
about this. They've always seemed
he or she deserves old age) .
2. Don't call her "young lady" happily married. We know we aren't
when she obviously isn't ... or him adopted.
,;young man" if you're 20 years his
Is it possible or probable that all of
us should be different types than our
junior.
3. Keep your voice at nonnal pitch father? Should we pursue this? and speed. Wrinkles aren't · CURIOUS AND A LITTLE
symonymous with loss of hearing or SUSPICIOUS
DEAR CURIOUS:
brain power.
4. Assume that your elder is of the
It's possible.
And if you don't settle for, that
world, not locked in a little box
now, you may bloody up a good
marked "Diacard."
5. Ask "What line of work are you marriage. - H.
in?" rather than "An! you retired?"
6, Unleu she (he) knOWll you know DEAR HELEN :
On a recent TV show, someone
her age, don't tell her she's eligible
said, "I hope to give my child roots
for the aenior citizens' diBcount.
7. Act surprised when she (he) and wings." What better hope for aU
revealB her age. She wouldn't men- us . parents! - JUST COM·
tion it unlesa posiUve she didn't look MENTING.
AMEN! L H.
it.
8. Give the kind of compliments
Got a problem? An adult subject
which don't Imply amazement that
.for discussion? YouJ!an talk it over
"you're holding up so well."
9. Never condescend. (Overhelp- in her column if you write to Helen
fulness is a fonn of condescension, Hottel, care of this newspaper.
you know.)

Our Reg . 1.17 each

33" Picket Fence
White plastic fence in
classic style. 153/• " high.

Our Reg. 28.88

Our Reg . 2.67

Lawn Edging
I .

40'x4"
poJyethelene.

durable

'

20" Drop Spreader
Enameled steel spreader
with 10" nylon wheels.

.

185 UPPER RIVER ROAD, GALLIPOLIS

Eight young people were confirmed and taken into membership
ol St. Paul Lutheran Church,
Pomeroy, Sunday.
In the group were Kristin An·
derson and William Anderson, Jr.,
chidren of Mr. and Mrs. William Anderson; Max Eichinger, son of Mr.
and Mn. Max Eichinger; Ruth Fry,
daughter of Mr. Jlnd Mrs. James
Fry; Ed,ward Lester, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Earnest Lester; Corey McPhail, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Me·

Phail; Tammi Taylor, daugher ot
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin R. Taylor; and
Eric Thoren, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph "Pete" Thoren, Jr.
Each of the confirmants received
il study Bible from the church.
Relatives were present to share in
the confirmation ceremony. Transfiguration Sunday celebrating the
day Jesus was transfigured to bright
holiness to stand with and converse
with Moses and Elijah from' heaven
above, was observed at I~ worship
service.

Mason

After 70 years.
, ..
By Lavina B1'811110D

Speclala••IIIJIIIIeat
This will brin'g back memories
to many people who read Ibis ar·
ticle.
My 7oth birthday ended my
career as a Meigs and Richland
County teacher. Never having
missed a decade from 20 • 80
without teac~ing experience
somewhere.
•
I shall always be grateful for
the Tuppers Plains faculty who so
carefully planned my retirement
dinner.
Being home most every day
bas given me time to make mental shelf room for the many caps
and hats which my husband of 50
plus years bas worn. I shall tell
that story later.
The golden annlversary cards
are still arriving since our
December anniversary. Bless all
of you for remembering. Friends
are wonderful.
We are now awaiting the birth
of yet another great-grandchild.
We now have them in Ohio,
California and Florida.
And now for the caps and hats!
The first would be a coal
miner's hat in Duncanwood. Then
a high school beanie in Hominy,
Oklahoma, while listening to the
.Indian tribes having their pow·
wow's which lasted well into the
. night. Working in his father's ser·
vice station, he was intrigued by
their blanket wardrobes.and their
, use of silver dollars. They had no
· dealing in those days with bills of
any denomination.
Then he donned a straw hat to
milk 18 cows by hand for W. E.
Matlack.
It took a chauffeur's cap to haul
the many loads of various kinds
in the Matlack truck.
Then the baseball cap with the
letters T.P. dating back to the
early 30's when he coached a
tadies softball team as well as
played baseball for many years.
Then he could have used a
fireman's hat to help drive the
vehicles out of the burning
building which housed the truck
and Arbaugh hearse. This was an
Election night fire.
The chauffeur's hat was again
necessary to drive the Springer
milk truck to the Racine bulk
plant each day for a span of four
or five years.
This was the time of leaving the

·Mrs. Sue Douglas was recently Mrs. Dolly Reed, Mrs. Lorraine
honored with · a layette shower. Wigal, Beverly Wigal, Mrs. Lillian
Games were conducted by Mrs. Pickens; Mr~. Ruth Ann Balderson
Marlene Putman, with prizes going and the honored guests, Mrs.
to Mrs. Ruth Toothman and Mrs. Douglas and son, Jonathan.
Verna Roee.
Gifts were opened by Mrs.
A blue and white color acheme was i . Douglas. The door prize also went to
used 10 decorate the rom and Douglas.
refreshment table. The refreshment
table was centered with a cake
ATTEND BREAKFAST
decorated with blue and white icing,
Approximately
120 women from
punch, null and mints were served.
area
churches
along
with several
AttenclinC were Mrs. Pat Martin,
ministers
attended
the
20!1\ annual
Mrs. Marlene Pu'tman, Mrs. Thelma
Lenten
breakfast
at
Trinity
Church
Smith, Mrs. Frances Reed, Mrs.
Wednesday
morning.
Miss
Mary
Erika Boring, Mrs. Mary Alice Bise,
Virginia
Reibel
had
the
meditation
Mra. Robin Douglas, Mrs. Leona
Ruth, Mn. Pearl Baker, Mrs. Verna and there was music by Mills Beth
Roee, Mrs. Ruth Toothman, Mrs. Perrin, pianist, and Mrs.Lols Burt,
Diane Jones, Mrs. M11mie Buckley, vocalist.

New~

reported

Mrs. Laurene Lewis, Mr. and Mrs.
Lester Johnson, Mrs. Helen Barker,
Mrs. Betty Cadle, Mrs. Pam Kearns,
Mrs. Mabel Johnson, Mrs. Wilma
Blake, Mrs. Denver Blake, Jackie
and Dawn, Karen Brown, Evelyn ,.
Lockett, Mrs. Clara Williams,
Shirley Miller and Tammy Miller.

BY ALMA MARSHALL
Correspondent
COVERED DISH DINNER

bright lights of electrically
lighted hOmes and moving to Jop.
pa where there was no elec.
HELD
tricity . •
•
CUFTON - A congregational
The snow filtered .through the
covered dish dinner was held on
cracks and made an extra
Friday evenlng at Clifton Unlted
blanket on children's beds. The
Methodist Church and at that time
water bucket froze over nightly
the birthday of the pastor, Reverend
as well as any food in the kitchen.
Kenneth Watkins, was observed. He Mason and area personals
There was a time of working at
received several cards and gifts. Ice
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Capehart
the Ravenna · Arsenal which
returned home recently after spencream and cake were served.
would have required the hard
Those attending were Reverend ding two montha vacation at Dania,
hat.
and Mrs. Kenneth Watkins, Mr. and Florida.
He needed a mask to work at
Mrs. Landon Smith, Elizabeth and
Mrs. Denver Blake, Jackie and
the T.N,T. plant in Pt. Pleasant
Ruth Mcintosh, Mrs. Joyce Carson, Dawn, Mrs. Marie Smith and Mrs.
as wash house leader.
Mrs. Sarah Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. Oara Williams visited Mrs. Naomi ·
He chose to wear the white
Ferris Justis, Mr. and Mrs. William Edwards at a rest home in Marietta, ·
navy hat but the call never
Brown, Mr. and Mrs. ·Thomas 0. on Sunday.
reached· him to be in the Navy.
Taylor, Barry and Jill, Gene Nelson,
Mrs. George Starcher of West
This was about 1945.
Mrs. John Sisson and Mary Alice,
Columbia is recovering from
His apprenticeship in masonry
Mrs. Matilda Noble, Mr. and Mrs.
surgery at Pleasant Valley HospitaL
work was served · under she
Bob Kincaid, Bobby, Jason and
Thomas Redman returned home
tutelage of H. A. Cole. From
Christy, Mr. and Mrs. Billy Slinday,
on Saturday, after undergoing
there he went into self emEddie and Lisa Starcher, Mr. and
surgery at Holzer Medical Center.
ployment as a full fledged mason.
Mrs. Kevin Brown and Rachael,
He was a patient there for two
Many buildings in various counGeorge A, Kearns, Patrick
Kearns
weeks.
.
tiesshowhisabilityyettoday.
He wore the blue city carriers
uniform in Mansfield as a letter
1·
carrier through the long hard
winters, the dog bites and
ATHENS - A series of Lamaze
whatever trial and joys a post·
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Childbirth
Preparation Classes,
man endures or enjoys.
Frank B. Samatowitz II, Long Bot· ·
sponsored
by
O'Bleness
Memorial
He drove school bus for several
Hospital, will begin the week of Mar· tom, are announcing the birth of a .
years, then as a final farewell to
ch
8. This class is for couples whose daughter, Tamara Lynn, in January
work he chose to be substitu~
expected
date of delivery is prior to at the Holzer Medical Center. The inmail carrier from I Reedsville of·
fant weighed six pounds, 13 ounces ·
May4.
fice for the regular. carrier Grant
and was 2llnches long.
.
Oass
participants
will
learn
Smith.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
breathing
and
relaxation
technlques
The most rewarding hat was
for first stage labor, effective ex- Arthur 0. Barr, Middleport, and Mr. '
the one he so faithfully wore to his
pulsion technique for second stage and Mrs. Frank Samatowitz I,
home church, Joppa as Trustee,
labor,
physical and emotional aspec- Colchester, Conn. Great·
Sunday School Supt., adult
ts
of
the
birth process, and body· grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
teacher or to lend a helping hand
conditioning
exercises to promote Roscoe Hollon, Chester, and Mrs.
to anyone hwo desperately
comfort
during
pregnancy and post- Flora Barr, Parkersburg, W. Va . .
needed a lift.
Mr. and Mrs. Samatowitz have a
partum.
Now he sits, day alter day,
.son, Frank Brandon Ill, two.
The
fee
for
the
series
is
$40.
To
awaiting a visit from one of the
pre-register for this seri\!5, or to
I ,
many people he's met throughout
request
a
schedule
of
future
classes,
.
the years. Unable to travel or
contact Pamela Collier, 211 Woodside
work, hearing Impaired, vision
Drive, Athens, Oh, 45701, or call 593Impaired by cataract, chronic ob5049.
struction pulmonary disease;
other than this he's !~ling flne.
As for myself, I maintain a
MRS. GILMORE HOSPITALIZED
wholesome attitude anxiously
Mrs. Mike Gilmore, the former
awaiting each new day with its
Debbie Black, Rutland, is confined
challenges and opportunities.
to the Pleasant Valley Hospital in
Having had six children, five of
Point Pleasant, W. Va. She was
whom are still living, I've lear·
taken there Saturday night by the
ned sacrifice, patience, and all
Mason Emergency Squad when she
those valuable lessons which only
became ill while traveling through
a mother, grandmother and
Mason. Mrs. Gilmore is undergoing
great-grandmother can know.
observation and tests for a possible
So nice chatting with you all by
heart condition.
the way of The Daily Sentinel.

.
Lamaze offered \ New arrivals

Send-a-mouse-to-college
successful at grade school
The American Cancer Society
recently held its ''Send a Mouse to
College" fund drive at .the Harrison·
ville Elementary School where
students raised a total of $121.27.
The student who brought in the
most money for each class was
awarded a T·shirt with the picture of
a mouse on it. The class winners
were : first grade, Bobby Vance,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bobby
Vance; second grade, Lisa Morgan,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James
Morgan; third grade, Wayne
Howard, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Howard; fourth grade, B'rlan
Durham, son of Mr. and Mrs. Theron
Durham; fifth grade, Eddie Gilliam,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Luther Gilliam;
sixth grade, Terri Gilliam, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Luther Gilliam.
Students taking part were: Angela

Lee, Tood Workman, Heath Adrian,
Bobby Vance, Tina Arnett, Gina Ar·

awarded a who
certilicate.
students
participated were

ENTERTAIN
MIDOLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Smith entertained Thursday
wtth ·a di~er party honoring her
~other, Mrs. Ellen Smith, on her
birthday.
Following the dinner, a birthday
cake and ice cream were served.
others attending were W. F. Smith,
Sr., Mrs. Cindy Smith and Nicole,

Casey Kasem
W MPO

SATURDAYS
8 til Noon
,-~J~os:e~p:h~an~d~M~a~rk~S~rru~·~th:·_ _ _ _j===========~:

nett, Kim
Osborne,
Lisa Morgan,
Perry
Levacy,
Amanda
¥ .olden,
Beth Wyatt, Homer Welsh, Kim
Chapman, Roberta Napper, Kelly
Hamilton, Wkyne Howard, Cindy
King, Belinda Bailey, Curtis Dalton,
Ronnie Pettry, Lisa Butcher, Donald
Laudennilt, Tommy King, Anna
Will, Karla Osborne, Kandy Parsons, Brian Durham, Carla Kauff,
Tammy Kauff, Jerry Derenberger,
Patty Johnston, Shirlena Six, Mike
King, Scott Oberholzer, Donna
Sergent, Cindy Payne, Anita
Levacy, Cindy Bailey, Eddie .
Gilliam, Jeff Arnold, Ilona Butcher,
Terri Gilliam and Bev Kauff. All

BANK ONE OF POMEROY. NA

614/992·2133

Ir~~====~==============~~=::::::

Sentinel Social Calendar
THURSDAY
HYSELL RUN Methodist Church
missionary meeting Thursday, 7:30
p.m. at tbe church. Rev. Cecil Wise .
will be the speaker. Public invited.
MEIGS ASSOCIATION for Retarded Citi2ens, 7:30p.m. Thursday, at .
the Meigs Community SchooL ,
SOUTHERN HIGH ,SCHdOL
junior class parents' alumni dinner ·
Thursday, 7 p.m. at the high school.
All junior parents urged to attend.
EVANGEUNE CHAPTER 172,
Order of the Eas\em &amp;tar, 7:30p.m.
Thursday, Officers to wear street
dresses.

RUMMAGE AND BAKE SALE
Thursday beginning a! 9 a.m. at
Long Bottom Community Building.
Sponsored by Long Bottom Com·
mooity Association.
FRIDAY
· MEIGS COUNTY Pomona Grange
Friday 8 p.m. at Rock Springs
Grange hall. , Racine Grange to
provide refreshments. All members
are urged to attend.
120 VARIETIES
Australis numbers more than 1211
varieties of marsupials among some
20 species of mammals.

1t1ons .

'"
~tiY1.f (1,,

itvd .. u pJ lt •1\l tl&lt;lde hv At tdlti \11 1:&gt; ft,l

womt' Jl

1\ll ti l\' q&lt;~ f\; \ \llli ful\1.' " tl.'lt•d It\ tlw I lol'&gt;,ll I IM iitLOIL

Layette shower honors woman

(155)

fabrics.

"The Place to Shop for
Work &amp; western"
Middleport, Oh.
M-5, 9-S; Fri. 9·8
318 N. 2nd Ave.
Phone 992·3684

65-Lb. Capacltv · '

I

•

cartoon picture .on my refrigerator.
When I removed
the picture, the
glue remained
and has yeUowt~~,
so It looks
terrible. Any
ideas
for
removing it wOuld
be greatly appreciated. - M.
H.
Cramer
DEAR M. H. - Try lighter fluid,
rubbing alcohol or laundry spot
remover.- POLLY
DEAl\ POLLY - I think I have
the best Idea for Kathy, who wanta to
rid her place of mice. I used to work
in a shop where the mice would
come out and beg for something to
eat! Some of the mice even tried to
climb our legs. I always drank a car·
bonated soft drink with lunch, so I
put a SDJA]lamount of it in a saucer
and put Ibis out every day until there
was not a mouse to be seen. Mice
cannot belch and when they drank
this they bel:ame bloated and died.
- E.G.P.
DEAR E.G.P. - I have heard of
this before, but have never tried it. It
is certainly a simple and safe
method,- POLLY

DEAR POLLY - To make a
makeshift hang~r for paper towels
in the basement, garage or in the car
when going on a picnic, I use one of
lh&lt;i6e wire coat hangers tllat has a
cardboard core to hang slacks or
pants on. Unfasten one end of the
hanger and then fasten the hOOk over
a nail.
When dressing in a hurry and the
underanns are wet to the touch
because deodorant has not completely dried, just dust with a
powder puff that has a bit of talcwn
on it.
Also, I have an answer for G, W.,
who has a problem with hanger
rrlar'ks on sweate111 and blouses. I
iron for other people and when there
is a fbance of such a problem, I fold
' a sheet of tissue paper in half, lay
the hanger with the hook up on the
two edges, and then fold the paper
over the straight bottom of the
hanger and back up over the curved
top. This gives four layers of tissue
over the wire. If it is not creased, it
will keep the clothes in shape even
without bulges at the tops of the
sleevet. -D. D.
Polly will send you one of . her
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
· Pointer, Peeve or problem in her
column. Write POLLY'S POIN·
TERS in care of this newspaper.

8 young people confirmed

- RGAIII
PlAT

I

TOP SOIL

...

-

compound

Cultivated

By Polly Ct'11111er
8pedaJ,!'orrespoadeat
DEAR POLLY - My son Pill a

The Daily Sentlnei-Pap-7

Pomeror M*leeort, Ohio

I

Polly's Pointers

.'60 Minutes ' of news outrates
60 minutes of JR. 's love life·
NEW YORK (AP) - CBS'
newsmagazine " 60 Minutes," the
most watched show in prime time
last year, has toppled "Dallas" from
the top spot in the networks' ratings
race, according to figures from the
A.C. Nielsen Co.
" Dallas" took first place from " 60
Minutes" early in November, and
has won the weekly competition 13
times in the last 16 weeks. Only
January's Super Bowl, historically a
big ratings winner, and a key "Mon·
day Night Football" game on ABC in
December marred the program's
record before last week's "60
Minutes. ''
Despite the setback for " Dallas,"
CBS was a big winner once more for the 15th time in 18 weeks - with
seven of the 10 highest-rated shows
for the period ending March 1. ·

Thursday, March s, 1911

thl''&gt;l' ht~~ ..,pir lll!d po. •rf(ll'1ll i'l'! will kl'l' P I!OU
~ ll' fl l•"'i h •d \dh'H..'V\;'1 VC1ll Holik C'tlllll '
'\. ~
..,~,.•k•l't ~\•U T Ll~'t 1!1h!.., liJ,J n;

CARRIER NEEDED
IMMEDIATELY

:/

t

-

IN THE MIDDLEPORT BUSINESS DISTRICT

" I&lt; 'I 11~1 1"1

42 CUSTOMERS

CALL: THE DAILY SENTINEL

MARGUERITE SHOES
102 E. MAIN ST. '

PH. 992·3639

POMEROY, OHIO

'I'

i

�Thursda , March s 1981
DICK TRACY

Judge terminates 21 cases
Thirteen de~e nd;mts were fined
· ht others forfet'ted bonds· m
·
and etg
·
c
c
t
Wedn
d
Me1gs ounty our
es ay.
. ed by J udge p at rtc
· k O'Brten
·
F111
were Burl Coleman, Reedsville, $150
.
t,
and costs, t hree days confmemen
license suspended for 30 days, DWI ;
Richard Embmeier, Columbus, $10
and costs, assured clear distance ;
David HarwOOd, Portsmouth, $W
and cQsts, speed ; ~ry Altizer, Addison , $20 and costs, failure to yield
half of roadway; Kenneth Eblin,
Rutland, Danny Hanuner, Gibsonburg, Dorothy Cartwright,
Mason, and Roger D. Clark, Reedsville, $22 and costs each, speed;
Kenneth Cowdery, Hockingport, $25
and costs, speed ; Frederick Fenton,
J r., Belpre, $21 nd costs, speed; Ernest Watterson, Hart!ord, $23 and .
costs, speed ; James Gtueser,
Rutland, $200 and costs, three days
confinement, license suspended 30

SHE MARRIED E!IOWE'N
TIFF=IL.,THE PLASTICS
MANUFACTURER-A
VERY
MAN .

days, DWI, $75 and costs, resiSting
arrest, $50 and costs, failure to comply with pollee orders; Ja~ueline
Carsey, Athens, $24 and costs,
speed.
Forfeiting bonds were Harry J .
Deeley, Jr., Indegendence, W. Va.,

Benjamin R. Coleman, Chesapeake, :
*"".50, speed; Micael J . Goss, Bay
"""
City, Mich., William B. Henry,
Columbus, Harold Vance,_Reynoldsburg, J erry E. Ball, Waterford , and
Radford Barnett, Martin, Ky ., $40.50
each, speed; Theron D. Workman, :
R 1 d $630 50 DWI
ll$401iii.iii50;,;pajjjjjjssjjjin.;gjjjajjjtjjj
1 aniiiiiiiiiiniiiteiiiiiirsiieciitiii'oiinii;iiiiiiiiuiitiiaiinii,iiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijf.
"'

Television
•
•
VIewmg
6' 00

ANNOUNCING
THE OPENING OF

IIUT FIRST L.ET ME RI&lt;PEAT
QUESTION I A!&gt;O:ED YOU

IF VOI.I'RI! THROUeH Sl\\lfi:J&lt;ING
AND IIE!I.IG CODDLED, SQUAW MAN-PEiRHAP!&gt; WI' CAN GET DOWN TO THE
IIUSINES~ .OF WHY WE'Re HERE!

THE OFFICES OF

EARLIER, MARY. ..
6 '30

STORY &amp; STORY.
'

A nORNEYS AT LAW

.
6 :58
7 '00

Steven L. Story and Karen H. Story
236 w. 2nd, Pomeroy, Oh.
(Formerly Meigs Gen. tiospitall
Office Ph. 992·6624
Home Ph. 992· 3523

ONLY 7 PERCENT
Even a lull moon reflects only 7
percent of the sw1light falling upon
it.

1elha
7,59
8:00

Realistic 4Q;.WatfPer Channel Stereo Receiver Slashed 44·%!

Farm Bureau leader feels
Ohio farmers need input
" With all the new proposals
coming from · the· Reagan administration, Ohio farmers need to
have input into what effects the
changes mean for agriculture," according to Wallace Hirschfeld,
president of the Ohio Farm Bureau
Federation (OFBFl.
March 16-18, 84 county Farm
Bureau presidents from Ohio will be
in Washington to talk with
congressional leaders and government officials about the Reagan
proposals.
The visit to Washington which is
an annual event allows Ohio Farm

:
:
:
·
,
:

Bureau leaders to discuss their
needs with leaders in Washington.
Meetings planned during the visit ·
include : a session with Secretary of
Agriculture John Block and
AsSistant Secretary Bill Lesher and
Under Secretary Seeley Lodwik of
the U.S. Department of Agriculture .
The county presidents will receive
a briefing from a military official at
the Pentagon and Ed Harper, deputy
director, Office of Management and
Budget, will meet with the group.
Susan Early, deputy assistant,
trade representative for agriculture,
will talk about the impact of

agricultural' corrunodities on U.S.
trade relations.
. Separate meetings will be held
with Ohio Senators John Glenn and
Howard Metzenbaum. Also (here
will be meetings between the county
presidents and their respective
congressmen.
Vernie Glasson , director of public
affairs for the American Farm
Bureau Federation, will outline
legislative objectives of the 3.2
million family na tional organization
for is session of Congress.
Rex Shenefield, Langsville, will
represent the Meigs County Farm
Bureau as president of the local
organization.

. . ··- . __. ~ -. __. .I. ·- .,. -·..

i ••••
·( j

•

''

,'
r·
'•..
'-- ·
:. .
;
•f '·
,•
·,,
' ·t
·-

•

Copies of the draft appliction and
other supportive material will be
available for inspection and copying
at cost during regular business
hours Monday through Friday
beginning March 9 at the following
locations:
Gallia County District Public
Library, Third Avenue and State St.,
Gallipolis; Jackson City Ubrary, 21
Broadway St., Jackson; Briggs
Lawrence Co. Public Library, 321 S.
Fourth St., Ironton; and Meigs Local
School District Public Library, 200
East Second St., Pomeroy.
'

ABOUT HALF OF
THE Ci.AIMG ARE
lf't LINE 1!1 TH

YOOR BILL S ...

FWWARDED TO US···

· THE OTHERS ARE MEDICAL OPIHIOH S
A5TROf'tOIUCAUY VARY. THE 0 f HEI&lt;
HIGftER . HOW 15
DOCTORG OBVIOUSLY
THAT POSSIBLE ? FELT TH EIR FEES
I'HE JUSTIFIED.

DO YOU, 1 H.HOI'I HOW I ARRIVED AT
DOCTO~ f't'!' DIAGkOSEG AMD MY
CHOORS? FEE S. I CAH'T SPEAIL FOK
AN YONE El 5E.

~·

"..

Huth, Sweet Charlotte" 1885
1~ 1 UP CLOSE
('' f) BUCK ROGERS Buck's search
forcrystals that wi llpower the Starship Searcher is jeopardize~ by a
strange mummified creature end 1
young girl with no memory or her
past and a terrllying vis ion of her
future . (60mins .)
1
I!J (l i !W THE WALTONSJaoon ia
torn between hia family and girl·
friend when her Jewish religion
sparks controversy in his strict
Baptist home. (60 mina.)
ffi(fjl PAPERGHASE 'OncaMoro
With Feeling ' Elizabeth logan ac·
cuses a respected law proteeeorof
se:~~ual harassment. but Profeaaor
Kings fi eld doe s not believe heY. (60
mins _)
(q} Q) MORK AND MINDY
8'30
SOUND OF TRUMPETS
[!I NBA BASKETBALL A11anta
Hawks vs Milwaukee Bucks
il.2l ID BOSOM BUDDIES
8'58 ( 31 CBN UPDATE NEWS
(f) 700 CLUB
(I I THURSDAY NIGHT AT 'ntE
MOVIES
0
@ " PEOPLE'S CHOICE
AWARDS
Ill (111 SNEAK PREVIEWS In a
spe cial program, hosts Gene 1Siakel snd Roger Ebert reveal their
' Guilty Plea s ures ' . movie's that
they 're embarrassed to admit they
love.
(1~ Q) BARNEY MILLER
9 ,30 I 9\ GOOD NEIGHBORS
(i'il THIS OLD HOUSE The south
roof gets an ice shield snd cedar
shingles, the hvlngroom will galla
layer o f energy -saving polystyrene
board , and the grounds
1
la celilting .
(Ciosed·Captio ed;

m

Ill

A .
·u · ·u
·

95
Reg .
359.95

C HAA GC IT

Buy now a nd get a rece 1ve r w1lh the power to
eas 1iy drove two speakers . pl us two magne loc
phone inputs tha t le t you use two turntables
Al so gel co ntrols fo r reco rding w1th two lilpe
decks . #3t ·2087
• 40-watts per channel, min . rms into
8 ohms, 20·20,000 Hz, 0.06% THO

. GASOI.INE A!.I.EY

t M OS f S TO RI SJ

It's not ljOur
fault, Lil! I'm
sorr1.,1 r . - -

;

r love

I thinl&lt;. Gretchen
has a fever!

her as much
as 4oudo!

011

U.S.A.)
fftliDTAXIJimbecomesabigmon ·
eymaker and the darling of dispat cher L ouie when he doe~ an
about -race turning his cab into an
ambitious obsession to achieve a
sec ret i2111.

10'00

10: 15
10:28
10:30

99~!

hiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij;;;;;...p;piii~iiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiill

L l .?ON T K\/CW .
SHE UIP _CQt&lt;.
&gt;v.;.GtJEl' F.l \\ IL i 4R ,

THE PICTURE OF
CON5U ElO 'S
MOTHER JOSG ED
)'()u~ "~&lt;1EM O RY

DIDN T 11' ?

.r-,

I HAVE ~ FEEL ING I
MAY H~VE HET HER ..

6UT THEN -&gt;GAIN
SHE 'S T)PICAL OF
WO MEN FROM THAT
P• RT OF THE WORLD ..
OA~K· E) ED DAR I\ ·
MAIRE D. . SENSUOUS.

8 U'T lC..\NT RE \ \f\\ 6ER.

WHERE/

Reg . 179.95 Each
Reg. Separate Items 809.80

s

1977 DODGE
ASPEN WAGON

1980 MERCURY
COUGAR X-R7

Slant

speed , radi a ls, top

a u tomati c,

ai r .

"Ext r a Clea n", 255
C l D engine, p added

per, guages, console.

wood

roof

vi n y l

ra ck.

Regular gas, air,

6

cy l i nder,

g rai n,

Landau, turb i ne
wheels. You must
see i t to be lieve i t .

195
1978 PONTIAC
GRAN PRIX
Loca 1 owner, si lver
w i th red inter ior ,
r oad wheels.

a ir,

r adi al s.

1978 FORD·
PINTO
cyl. , auto.• air .

Lu xury car room

'3595

Realisti~~~~o :~~~~:ceiver ~as
Q

au to, power s teer
i n g &amp; b rakes,
cru isec onlrol .

·
·Two Opllmus T-100 Speakers
• SCT-24 Cassette Deck with
Dolby ' NR
• LAB-58 Changer with Realistic/
Shure R25EOT Magnetic Cartridge
• Roll-About Audio Rack

'4295

1977 CHEVY
CAPRICE CLASSIC

1976 AMC
SPORTABOUT
Station Wagon
C ru ise control , ai r,

roof

rack.

'

Complete System with Metal-Tape Ready
Cassette Deck and Audio Rack Cut 34%

"Su per Sharp ", a ir ,

5

with sm all c ar fu el
ec on o my ,
w el l
equ ipped.

'· •'

1978 CHRYSLER
CORDOBA 1

Li g ht blu e w i th
navy blu e v inyl t op
and pin stripe, 4

BAHNEY

31 ·208740·2025 42· 2973

'6795

'3195

1976 CHEVY
MONTE CARLO

t op ,

• STA-820 AMIFM Receiver
·Two Optimus T-100 Speakers
• LAB-120 Belt-Drive Turntable with
Hinged Dust Cover and $12.95·
Value Realistic iAOC OLM30 MK III
Cartridge

wood

12:00

12:30
'1 M o.,,0 ,

L"bo'""""'

12:58
1:00

1"'

UO

'2395

1: 15

HER5'5 ANOTHER
DANDELION ... GIVE
IT A ''POOF ..

NOW$429S
NOW S527S
NOW SJ99S
NOWUI9S

----YOI"

~OOF!
.

14·613 31 ·2087 40·2025
42-2974 42·3021

Phone Book for the ltlllllle lllaell Store or Dealer Nearest You

~

'
"'?,,. .
\ ,~"'
( I &gt;~'
·?
·~- ·

"' lr.
--&lt;.

Gallipolis, Ohio
Check

'f.

PR&gt;CI. S . . .

v•"' AI ..o .vnlu •• $lORI '

A IUVtSION li t lAND T COAI"()J'i.-.TION

··-..r
I "' '

'

'" .p

'

SORR'r'.. I DIDN'T KNDW
THEI' EVER ' POOFED" BACK
-I

2'00
2 :28

'

2'30

'

'' '

-

m

I]) liOl IHIID

m

11 :45

g r ai n .

t978JEEPCJ · 5,WJ\SS4595 ..........................
1978 BLAZER , WAS SS9SS ................... ,. . .. , ....
1976 BLAZER, WAS $4495
1971 DODGE RAMCHARGER , WAS$4195 ............ ..

446-9800

YONDER COMES
TH' PARSON's WIFE!!

20.20
I
191AUSTIN CITY LIMITS' A Songw·
ril ers ' Spec •sl Featuring WillteNal ·
son ' (60 mins.)
~il NEWS
( 4) CHERINCONCERT Cherislea ·
tured ~ n her own dazzling nightc~ub
ac t, whi ch features her hit songs.
CBNUPDATENEWS
(3l NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
tlll OUTER LIMITS
TBS EVENING NEWS
131 CBNUPDATENEWS

NEWS ·
111 JOHNANKERBERGSHOW
I t I MORECAMBE AND WISE
11 ' 28
CBNUPOATENEWS
11,30 (2l 1J ('I) THE TONIGHT SHOW
Host . Johnny Carson. Guest: Sally
Field. (60mins .)
13 ) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
( 4 ) MOVIE·~COMEDY)•• "Foolln'
Around" 1&amp;80
({l !HI ID
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
I!Jm CBS LATE MOVIE 'THEJEF·
FERSONS : Jenny ' s Discovery '
Stars . Isabel Sanford , Sherman
Hemsley, Jenny has pre ·maritaljit·
t ers snd questions whether or not
sh e reall y l oves Lionel. {Repeal)
' M cMILLAN AN D WIFE : fhe Fin•
Art o l Staying Alive ' Stars: Rock
Hudson. Su s a~ Saint James . Sally
tS ktdnapp ed and her abduclors
demand a pn celess Rembrandt as
ransom . (Repeat)

•
Reg. Separate Items 1039.70

4 WHEEL DRIVES REDUCED

195 Upper River Road

MfRCY SIIKE5.~'

ffi (U\111111

m
,oo m a cil en o

10:45
10:56
11

WINNI E

•,:

~

- ~ ,

...,..J
,,..

~

ITAROA

I K)

I

ITYFARC± '
I KI J

WHAl' THE EJURL!:SQUE:
QUEEN LIKED MOST
Ae&lt;JUT FL.Y lJ,J6.
Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug gested by the above cartoon .

J I I

I I I]-( I I)

Prln(answerhere: TtiE[

(Answers tomorrow \

YeSierday 's

I Jumbles

BANJO

Answer

Caused

YOUTH

3 :00

3 ,58
4 :00
4 :50
5 :30
5 :58

I i l ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
t1Q) MOVIE ·(MUSICAL·COMEDYI
"•,'I "Ski Party" Hit65
15\MOVIE·ISPECTACULAAI"II ·
" Sod om 1nd Gomorrah" 1961
111 1121 ID CHARLIE'S ANGELS
' Angel s At Th e Altar' Kelly IS to be
rn atd of honor at her best friend's
weddmg unt il the angela discover
the cerefno nv il'f a bealltilut c amoll ·l
llag e fo r a ter rifying murder
sc heme . (Repel'lt; 70 mins.)
( 2) 1) ( 7\ TOMORROW COAST·
TO·COAST Gu e st · Futuri st Al'o'in
f ortiOr. (90 mtns)
131 CBNSPORTSREPORT
I 31
ROBERT
SCHULLER
ICAPTIOM!D)
i ll CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS Guest · Ch or
t12l Q) NEWS
t 4l MOVIE ·(HORROR) •• ~, "Th8
Legacy " 1978
!3 l KOINONIA
171 NEWS
,101 t BELIEVE
I 3 \ CBN SPORTS REPORT
&lt;3l ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
15 1 MOVIE ·(MYSTERY) ••
" Diamond Wizard " 1954
l 3 \ CBN sPOR-TS REPORT
13 \ 700CLUB
.
' 5 ' MISSION IMPOSSIBLE
. 3 1 SOUNO OF THE SPIRIT
, l 1 SPORrS RIEPORT

PEN CIL

SUBU RB

a ferment at the brewery - YEAST

Jumbla Book No. 16, eont1lning 110 puules.ls IVIillblt for S1.75 postpaid
!rom Jumble, clo t~l ntw1p1per, Box 34, Norwood. N.J. 07648. l~lude your
n1me, •ddrns, zip code 1nd m1ke checks p1yeble lo Newspaperbooh.

BRIDGE
Probe posits proper pUm

.

East played the ace of clubs
NORTH
• A 10 9 8

l·5· BI

• A64

•so

•2
.Qt032

.QJtG863

.A912

WEST

EAST

·K·5
+tos

+A876
SO~TH

.J9

.KQJ76
87

+Q43

.K

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: East '
We1t

North

Pass
Pass
Pass

1+

2.Pass

at trick one and returned the
deuce. announcing an original

holding or four clubs. South
rulled and trumps were
drawn in three rounds , Ea st

+KH2

., 5

sheddi9g a club and a heart.
Next, a diamond was led to
the jack and ace. When Eas t
returned a diamond, South
played the queen from hos
hand. droppins the 10 from
West and contonued with two
more rounds of diamonds . di s·
carding a heart from his hand.
South now stood at the
crossroads. He had to avoid
two heart losers. There were
at least three ways to pla y the
SUit:

Ealt

SOUth

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Pas~

4.t• '

Opening iead:•Q

m

A!.!.EYOOP

'

.R

199

h.

g,oo

,_.

tJ
........_... ....... ...._. I

1

:··'

The Area Six Haith Systems Agen- ·
cy, Inc. is seeking its fourth year of
·. • full designatioteand funding by the
Department of Health and Human
.. Services to continue as the Health
Systems Agency for southern and
southeastern Ohio.

'

"'COPIES OF YOUR
BILLS ALOHG WITH
COPI): GOF YO U~
PATIENTS' MEDICARE
CLAI ~5 HAVE BEEN

STA-820

Consumers of health services and
representatives of health care
professions and institutions are invited to attend public meetings
scheduled to offer the public an opportunity to review and conunenton
the application of Area Six Health
Systems Agency, Inc. (ASHSA ).

Meetings are slated at 7:30 p.m.
March 25 in the Holiday Inn, Cam·
bridge, and at 7:30p.m. March 26 at
Ohio University Inn , Athens. Public
meetings are held to allow public
comment and discussion concerning :
(I ) Qualification of the Area Six
Health Systems Agency to continue
the duties imposed by Policy Letter
93-jj41 and the amendments of Policy
Letter!J6.79;
(2) The proposed second year of a
three-year work program;
(3 ) The composition of the gover·
ning body.
Any citizen or group may submit
either fonnal, written, or oral
testimony to the agency at the
meetings. Written testimony also
may be submitted at any time prior
to April15, 1981 to : Area Six Heal~h
Systems Agency, Inc., P.O. Box H,
Marietta, Ohio 45750.
Public and written comments will
be discussed -at the meeting of the
governing body on April 22 at the
Hotel Lafayette in Marietta.

·m:6~~~~~~'==~~~ ~.~~~. .

ANNIE

Newman, Jenny Ekllch; fourth row, I tor, Jenny Buck,
Amy Mitch, Rachel Eklich, Patty Jones: fifth, I to r,
Kelly Smith, Bobbi Jo Huffman, Grela Riffle. Amy
Johnson; sixth, I to r, Shelly Triplett, Trina Bachtel,
Deanne Haggy, Nancy Baker. Lynne Arms and Debbi
Buck are leaders of the troop and assislants are Janke
Haggy and Karen Triplett.

by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

Unscramble theN four JumtMes.
one len~r to each square, to form
tour ordtnary words.

CIJa

7 ,30

,
INVESTITURE HELD- An Investiture has been
· held for members of Pomeroy Brownie Troop 1271
which meets at the Pomeroy Elemenlary School. In·
vested members of the new troop are: first, left to
. right, Myrtle Klein, Julie Buck, Betty Monson, Jeanie
ArmB, Jody Smith; second row, I to r, Toni Rutter,
April Tannehill, Barbara Anderson, Kim Ewing; third
row, I to r, Samantha Lee, Tammy Klein ..JeiUlifer

EVENING
( 2\ 0 f7J I!J mlf!ll !Him NEWS
l1J BACKYARD
fl1 MOVIE ·(MUSICAL) ••• "Willy
Wonkli And The Chocolate Fietory " 1971
(5)
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
liJ ABC NEWS
fll 3· 2·1 CONTACT
('ffi OVER EASY Host Hugh Down a
is jomed by his daughter Dee Dee
Do wn s to di sc us s the chal'lg ing
psrent·c hild relstionship. (Closed·
Captioned; U.S.,A .)
tiJ D CIJ NBC NEWS
l1J PAUL AND MONA
($1 BOB NEWHART SHOW
ll.i FACE THE MUSIC
0[Jl ~.al CBS NEWS
( 91 WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
(jjJ LILIAS, YOGA AND YOU
IHI ID ABC NEWS
fl) CBN UPDATE NEWS
(1"1 1J PM MAGAZINE
tfJ COME TO THE WATER
(.$) ALLIN THE FAMILY
(i)@ Q) FAMILY FEUD
Ill CANCER CALLIN
I!J [ I l TICTAC DOUGH
( 9) (jj)
MACNEIL·LEHRER
REPORT
(1dJ NEWS
BULLSEYE
llJ' ZOLA LEVITT
ffi SANFORD AND SON
lSI COLLEGE BASKETBALL Ohio
State
Uni ... ersity vs Purdue
University·
I!J (]) JOKER'S WILD
l t l{fjl DICK CAVETT SHOW
lW MATCH GAME
iUJ Q) FACE THE MUSIC
ffi CBN UPDATE NEWS
ill IJ CHURCHILL AND THI!
GENERALS A political drama capturmg the intrigue , political man·
ipuletion. and force ge!'lerated by
Winston Churchill during the World
War II. years . ,

1ff)~ru} f'e)1f ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ s

By Oswald Jacoby
aad Alan Soata~

I. If East has both hea rt
honors, a low heart must be
led from dummy. East wins

the queen or king, but must
lead away from his remaining

heart honor.
2. If West has both hea rt
honors and East the 10. a low
heart must be led to the nin e.
West wins, bu t is endpla yed.
3. If West has a doubleton
heart honor. the ace ol hear ts
and a heart musl be led. West
wins, but wi th no more hearts,

. The longer you delay play·
ong ·your weakest suit, the
more information you should

be able to get.
South overbid slightly when
he leaped to four spadeii.
Three spades would have been
enough. North would have
passed and the right contract

However. four spades is by
no means hopeless, and South
actually made the contract
although there appears lo be
four certain losers.

must give South a rull and
sluff.
South elim inated ( I I
because Ea st had already
turned up with two aces and

could hardl y have the king·
9ueen of hearts as he passed
m ftrst seat. (2) •was unlikel y
because with East short in

spades and apparently holding
four cards in each minor,

East, not West. figured to be
long in hearts. South opted for
(3). He played the ace and a
heart. West scored his king,

but South took the rest.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN l

~~~tit'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Organic
I Primrose catalyst
5 Classify
40 Israeli
II Yearn
seaport
12 Vegas
DOWN
employee
1 Briand·
13 Hands
KeUogg on board
! l'wlgent
14 Pass time
Yesterday's Answer
l M.G.M. film
idly (91.)
16 Iranian's
25 "The Street
classic
15 Sky deity
ancestor
with - "
4 Cutdown
16 Debussy's
19 Roman
(1948 film 1
5 Snake
"La -"
historian
28 Evening
6 Biblical
11 Place
28 Sophistl·
mountain
(Sp.)
for coal
7 Lamentable
cated
29 Blunder
18 Eating place
8 Sinatra's
23 Charles
31 Per 28 Fruit decay
''That - ''
Bronson film 33 "Mondo - "
21 Last letter
I Bring comfort 24 One star
35 Some
(Brit.)
of 3 Down
36 Wing
10 Thirty &lt;Fr. l
22 Wash
23 Bind
24 Alencon, e.g.
25 Octavia's male b-t--1f-+26 Beseech
21 Car pioneer
28 Subject
matter
30 Recent
(prefix)
31 Patriotic
women's
group
32 JeaMe d' 34 "An - to
Remember"
(1957 film)
36 Indian city
37 Dawdled
38 British.
symbol

DAILY CRYI"1'0QUOTE- Here's how to work It:
.tXYDLBAAXR
II

One

l~tter

LONGFELLOW

simply stand! for another. In this sample A i1

usecl lor the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single letlers,
apollrophes, the length and formation or the wnrds are all
hinls . Each day the rode letters are dift'erent.
CRYI'TOQUOTES

AD B

E S DJ

RLCCLG
VSEI\

VH

J N WC

V C. H

w
OBH C

p

ws
WS

GWHZX!.GGA . - XDX
NDZI.
Cryploquole: THE WOMAN WHO IS KNOWN ON·
i.Y THROUGH A MAN IS KNOWN WRONG.-HENRY ADAMS

Yes~rday's

.

�_,

Page----10-The Daily Sentinel·

.

Thursday, Marcil 5,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1981
6 ---=-L-os'"'t"'a""n-:d'"'F""o-un.r-·
Lost: small . black dog;

Winter brings chill to farmers' profits
WASHINGTON tAP) - Wtmer
has brought a chtll to fanners' in·
come prospects m 1981, but
· Agriculture Department experts say
· there is a chance of some recovery
this sprmg and during the remam·
der uf the year.
Lower prtces for wheat, soybeans.
cotton and cattle have been among
the recent factors , a preluninary
report said Wednesday.
"Markets have been weak tn
response to generally favorable crop
developments in the Southern
Hemisphere, some improvements 111
U.S. soil motsture condittons, continued large domestic meat supplies
and lagging demand for agrtcultural
products caused partly by high interest rates both here and abroad, "
tl satd.
Even so, farm pri ces '·have
remamed 10 percent above a year
ago," officials said.
The report, issued by the department's World Food and Agricultural
Outlook and Sttualton Board, satd
exports of corn and soybeans have

been sluggish.
Foretgn buyers seem to be ordering on a "hand-t&lt;rmouth" basis
'' in an attempt to minimize inventory costs and obtain the market
benefits of large Southern
Hemtsphere crops," it satd.
Thus, the report satd. "U.S. !ann
income and food prtce levels durmg
the first quarter are likely to be
lower than earher expected ''
Department experts still are
keepmg to an earher csttmate that
retail food prices overall wtll nse an
average of 10 percent to 15 percent
this year, compared to a gam of 8.6
percent m 1980. Steeper price increases. parltcularly [or meat, are
expected in the near future.
Although the report did not mclude
[arm tncome projections for the en·
tire year, tt showed the annual rate
of mcome durmg the first quarter
now is expected to be $21 btlhon to
$23 bilhon, nsmg to $25·billion to $27
btllion m the second quarter.
An annual rate, in this case,
means that 1£ !ann mcome durmg a

three-month period held steady over
the entire 12 months, that would be
fanners ' net income for the calendar year.
The February report had
esllmated the net income annual
rate at $22 billion to $24 billton m the
first quarter and $26 billton to $28
billion m the second.
Last year, fanners' net mcome
plwnmeted to $23 btllion from $31
billton m 1979, renectmg depressed
commodity prices, particularly in
the first half of 1980. In December,
when the outlook appeared rosier,
department experts said !ann in·
come could rebound to between $27
billion and $32 billion this year.

outgrowth of an agreement
negotiated last year between
Nigeria and the United States.
Agriculture Secretary John Block
told the meeting be considered the
committee's plan "to be in the best
interest or-the United States, the
Mrican naUon of Nigeria and
private business and industry in
both countries."
Block said the Agriculture Department " is opening an agricultural
trade office in Lagos," the capital of
Nigeria, and that the departments of
State and Conunerc~. the ExportImport Bank, the Overseas Private
Investment Corp., the U.S.'Chamber
of Conunerce and other groups "are
also deeply involved in development
activities" in Nigeria.
The group said it plaMed a
meeUng with Nigerian leaders later
this sprmg in Lagos.

cotton. Livestock prices should fresh fruits and vegetables, and
strengthen as producers reduce out- processed foods in 1980, while its
put in response to a squeeze on retur- capactty continued to expand. A subns.''
stantial increase in the inventory of
Some other comments in the suitable rail and barge equipment is
outlook report included:
foiming a buffer against local ser·
-'"Exports m the first quarter of vice disruptions.
fiscal 1981 (October-December J "Nevertheless, spot shortages of
were above a year ago, but below ex· equipment can still be' expected I
pectations. Much of the declme is during peak seasons in 1981.
due to price weakness for soybeans Railway labor contracts are up for
and products caused by generally renewal, but it Is too early to
favorable crop developments in forecast the course of negotiations."
South Arnertca, a strengthening
WASHINGTON (AP)- A group of
dollar and sluggiSh demand for agnbusiness leaders and others plan
soybeans and products in Western to work with Nigeria in projects that
Europe.
may serve as a model for helping
-"Pesticide supplies should be other less-developed countries.
ample during 1981. Basic manufacThe group, which calls itself the
turers' overall supplies are reported Joint Agricultural Consultative
to be 4 percent greater than last Conunittee for Nigeria, met Wed·
season, with herbicide supplies up 8 nesday with Agriculture Departpercent, insecticide supplies down 3 ment and other govenunent ofpercent, and fungtctde supplies llctals.
about the same as a year ago.
Orville L. Freeman, who · was
" Prices are expected to average secretary of agriculture in the Ken·
about 10 percent above last year.
nedy and Johnson administrations of
-''The U.S. transporation system the 1960s, ts the chainnan.
moved record volumes of grRin,
Offtctals said the committee is an

Commodity pnces m the corning
months " will be mcreasingly affected' by crop prospects in the
United States and other Northern
Henusphere countries, the report
said.
'
' 'Some price strength should be
provided by the tightening world
supplies of feed grams, otlseeds and

male, long hair, taken
somet ime Wednesday bet
ween the hours of 4 and 5:30
p.m . Name Is Rusty
Anyone
knowing
whereabouts call 992· 7086
Sallie Byers. Like a son not
a hunting dog

Three
home.

Found : aiJerage size collie
w1th collar and tags .

Terribly

Lost: brown wallet in the
vtcmlt,y of Craw's Steak
.House
iri Pomeroy
Valuable papers needed .
Leave at the Sent mel office
ror in the night depository at
the office on 111 Court
Street . Can phone 742 ·2072.

'

NOTICE OF SALE

,YP £NOV(311
MOM PULLS

Offers W1 ll be rece1ved

until 4.00 O'Clock PM on

t&gt;At7'S PAPER
APART ..

the 13th day of Aprd, 1981 ,
at the Mayor's offtce, 237
Race Street , fa( the sale of
th e followtng descnbed
real es tate, to w1t
Real estate s•tua ted at
the corner of Garf 1eld and
South Th1rd Avenue tn , the

Village

MILK HEARING - Chairman of the Senate
Agriculture Committee Jesse Helms, R·N.C. motion.•
to an aide during a hearing of that group Wednesday on

Capitol Hill which Is attempting to stop a rise In milk
product prices on April I. In center Is Sen. Walter Huddleston, D-Ky. (AP Laserphoto)

campaign gets
Reagan's axe
WASHINGTON (AP) - The controversial anti·smokmg campaign
set up by the Carter admwistration
wtll cut considerably by Prestdent
Reagan's budget ax, tl was reported
today.
The Washington Post satd the
Reagan administratton origmally
planned to do away with the
program epllrely, but 1! agreed to
restore some funds at the urging of
Health and Human Servtces
Secretary RtchardSchwetkcr.
The anll-smokmg program, wtth a
budget of $3 mJllion and 24 em·
ployees, was started several years
ago by Joseph Caltfano, former
secretary of Health, Educatton and
Welfare. It was much cnticized,
. especially in tobacc&lt;rproducmg
; states.
. The newspaper said the Reagan
· adrnimstratwn also plans to cut the
: Community Services Agency, a suc·
; cessor to the old Office of Economic
: Opportunity, the original antipoverty program created dunng
: Prestdent Lyndon .Johnson's War on
; Poverty
• CSA, which makes grants to com. muntty groups in low-wcome areas,
:IS scheduled to spend $041 mil !ton in
; the current fiscal year.
Several weeks ago, the Reagan ad·
rnimstration said it wanted to combme 40 ·health and soctal servtce
programs wto a "block grant" for·
mula to the states, cutting their
budgets 25 percent m the process.
CSA was one of those 40 programs.
Appeals to the Office of
Management and Budget to relaiD
the agency apparently have been
turned down, the Post sat d.

•

,Emergency squad runs
'
, Two emergency runs were made
, Tuesday by local umts and one this
: mormng the Meigs Co u1.ty
: Emergency Medical Service repor. ted.

At 1: 20 p.m Tuesday the Rutland
: squad went to the Southei'n Ohio
:Coal Co., for Cholats Gaul who was
· taken to Holzer Medtcal Center· at
: 3:16 p.m. the Pomeroy Squad took
: Clara Paulson from the Pomeroy
:Health Care Center tu Veterans
, Memorial Hospital.
; This morning at 4:22 a.m the
; Rutland umt went to Meigs Mme
· Number Two for Terrence Skinner
: who was taken to 0' Blencss
:Hospital, Athens.

Harrisonville
Social News
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Barnhart,
Bradbury, vtstted Mr. and Mrs. Bud
Douglas Wednesday afternoon.
Mrs. , Janice Waldeck, Loudenville, VISited her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Mllt:e Epple Saturday .
Mr and Mrs Bob Alkire visited
with Mr. and Mrs. Earl Ewing,
Mason, recently.
Mtss Penny Clark, Middleport,
spent the weekend With her grand·
parent&gt;;, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wiseman
and Lola Clark.
Mr. Earl McGrath has returned
home after spendmg a month m
Flonda visiting his son and
daught,er-in-law, Mr. and Mrs
Charles McGrath and son.
Mrs. Lou Eshehnan has been
returned to University Hospital m
Colwnbus.
Mr. Louie Christian is m Holzer
Medltal Center and 1s slowly improving.
WAN TO INDIA

WASHINGTON (AP)
The
Government of India has recetved a
loan of $35 1rulhon from the InternatiOnal
Development
Association
The money will be used to construct some 350 nules of all-weather
roads m the Indian state of Bihar.
The project wlll help local farmers
to get their produce to the market
and It is expected to beneftt some 2
mtlhon people.

Manon J . Easterday to Murphy
Otl Co., Right of way, Sutton.
John A. Smith, Dorothy Smith to
Murphy Otl Co., Right of way,
Pomeroy.
Virgil B Teaford , Helen L.
Teaford to Jmuny B McClure, Lot,
Mtddleport.
Albert R. Dangelo, Wtlma L.
Dangelo to Robert l.. Duneux, Suste
Durieux, Parcel, Olive
Wayne L. Adams, Janice K.
Adams to Stanley 0 Duckett, Leona
G Duckett,2.17 acres,Sahsbury.
Georgie W. Pullins, Linda L.
Pulltns, Ruby M. Frick, Paul Frick
to Herald Oil and Gas, Right of Way,
Salisbury.
Robert C. Bailey, Wtlover W.
Bailey to Herald Oil and Gas. R-W,
Sahsbury.
Barbara A. Grover, Palton B.
Grover to Herald Oil and Gas, R-W,
Salisbury.
George W. Hackett , Ill. Mary B.
Hackett to George W Hackett , III,
Mary B. Hackett, Pomeroy.
Everette W. Holcomb aka Everett
W. Holcomb, Vera Holcomb to Gary
Hrinda , Kimberly Hrmda, Parcels,
Columbia.
Leo McMil\in, Alma P McMillin
to Ralph D. McMilltn, Cynthia L.
McMtlhn, Parcel, Salem.
Harry 0 Bolinger, dec. to
Josephme L. Bolinger, Cert. Trans.,
Pomeroy.
Inez Handley ak~ Lesste I. Handley to Zelia M. Johnson, Atty w
Fact, All for Trans , Dexter
Inez Handley aka Lessie I. Han·
dley, Zella M. Johnson, Atty. tn
Fact, to Rtchard Hatfield, Karen
Hatfield, Lots, Dexter.
Geraldine C. Reed to Buckeye
Rural Elec. Coop, R-W, Rutland .

Market report

--

4 7~1

Bul b 1,000 lhs and up 42 50-~ Z5
Sl!!U)o!hk&gt;rtows - by the pound 3S ~50
SprlnijCr by the head :oo-185
Cuw.s-ta lf by the hctu.l3~20
Vt!ttl C!tiVe!'! - choke c:mtl prim.: BZ50-99, gootl
71&lt;10
8~tllyc.~:~lves"7 ~154

Top ~!139 7b-40 2!i
Bua n1 J6..J3 25
J:&gt;I!:S l.ly lhc hcctll 0-23 5CJ

&amp;l w ~ "&amp;olb.1 111ldup:l53&amp;-37:;(1

REAPS

0«7

LOtiO

II

~ ~~Z

AL T!.iCGI,
~P

CCI."""""

$pj:ltH6&gt;$,

EVANGELINE

cao

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classifieds and
Savell I

PIANO .

Too

valuable to neglect, expert
tun1ng &amp; · and repa ir Lane
Daniels, 742 2951 or 992

2082

lI
l

Ractne Volunteer Ftre
Department spansors a
shot gun &amp; nfle match
every Sat . ntght 6 :30 p .m
at th ~ •r bvddtng in Bashan
Factory choke 12 guage
shot guns only Open Sights
22 nfle

___ _

Chapter

2 F 70, 1.4 in . Remington

Prtn t one word tn each
space below Eac l1 in
itt a I or group of figures
coun ts as a word Count
name and address or
phone number tf used
You'l l get better results
•f you descnbe fully ,
g1ve pr1ce. The Sent•ne l
reserves th e r •ght to
classtfy , ed tt or reject
any ad Your ad w1ll be
put '" the proper
clast it catton •f you ' 11
check th e proper bOx
below

tires in good cond 882·3592 .
Old or historical 1tems
from Me1gs Co
Par
ticu lar ly Pomeroy Signed
stoneware , bottles, ad
:vertlstng, photographs ,
t o kens ,
documents ,
sovvcn1r Pteces, postcards,
etc. I' m a collec tor, not a
dealer Call Bob Roberl s
~fter 5 p m 992·2592

noon

Giveaway

Pupptes 2 female , 1 white,
I black , 3 males , 2 wh1te. 1
black father , white husky
type mother, black setter

New , used. and t~ntt(lue fur
nllure. No ttem to l arge or
lo small. Wt II bUy one piece
or complete households
Martin' s General Store at

type 843·2971

Give away . adorable pup·
pies to good home Will be

9'12 6370

large dogs Call992 5914

Now buying gold and
silver, Old pocket watches,
cha1 ns. diamonds, silver
money and cotns Marttn' s
General Store, Middleport

992 6370.

PHONE 992-2156
or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomero'l', 0., 45769

11

ti - Hou•t• tor II tnt

2- ln M•mon•m

u ~ Mobtle

J- AnnounctmMn

tor II tnt
u - AII•rtmtnt for llttftl
n - FAoom•

•- Gtve.tw•y
~ - M•ppy Adl
.t- Lost 1nd Found

7- Y.trd hit

1- Pvbhc S.lt

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

w,ntlod
ll- Sttu•tlcl Wut.ct

tl - Mtlll

U- lnsur•nn

14- luunen Tr.ttn ll\f
1)- SctiOOIIInlln.tction
lhdto TV

It-

These cash ra tes
include dtscount

• ce ••~·r

lt- W.tnttd To Do

eFINANCIAL
?1-

17 _ _ _ _ _ __
18 ______________
19 _ _ _ _ _ _ __
20. --------------

21

22
23
24
25

_ _ _ _ _ _ __
_ _ _ _ _ __
_______________
_ _ _ _ _ _ __

IVIIn"t

Opportunity
22- Mon•r to lou
11- Proltllton•l
StrWtCIS

eREAL ESTATE
Jt - Homtilor S.111
11 - Mol)!lt Homu
tor Sale

JJ- F•rmtlor Salt

l4- lusintu lulldlnt•

s ________

26.-------------6 _ _ _ _ _ _ ___ 27 . - - - - - - - - - - 28._ _ _ _ _ _ __
7. _ _ _ _ __
29._____________
8 _ _ _ _ __
30._ _ _ _ _ ___

S185.00 to $500 week ly doing
mailtng work . No c~
perience required
AP

eMERCHANOISE
) 1- HoullftO!cl QOCICII
U - CI, TV , II Mia lquljlmtnl
U - Anhqun
U- MIIC , Mltct\lrtdlst
1 U - luHdint hp'll"
for hit

s•- tt•••

eFARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
at- Fir"' lfiUIIImtnt

Deadlines

1 30 P .M D.t•lr
1~ Noon S.turd.,
lor Mo"d'Y

9 ________;,_____

10 _ _ _ _ _ ___ 31
-_
- -_
- -_
- -_
- -_
- -_32 _
II _ _ _ _ _ _ __
33.,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
12 - - - - - - - - - - - 34 _ _ _ _ _ __

15 - - - - - - - - 16 - - - - - - - - - -

•d•n

NYIW8 .

t Attractive part time work

:· for
well
groom e d
,. homema~ers who lov e
' pretty f~shions and want to
keep up on current styl es.

Average $10.00 per hour

plus free wardrobe for
those
who qualify .
Management opportunilv
open, For tree intomat•on
please pt'lone 992·3941 or

11- Truta• for h i t

U - LtYIItclell
,.- H•y &amp; Or t in
U - UH 6 Jll•rtUIItr

e TRANSPORTATION

669 4535

71 - Auto, tor lilt
71- VInl &amp; 4 W.O
1t- Motwcyclts

,Auto "'•'''

&amp; Acceuorlll
71- AioltO lltto•lr

eSERVICES
11 - Homelmprovemthtl
11- PtumDintl lauutln,

n - l,c:•w•llnt
11- IIIHtriC:II

' "''''""'''"
Hlullnt
11- M.H lle,.ir
U - Otfttr•l

11- UI''-ttsttry'

Rates and Other lnform1tjon
I d.ty
1 dlyl
J dlyl

Cull

i,N

....

!.It

CMrtl
I.Jf

VETERANS! IF YOU CAN
SPARE 39 DAYS A YEAR .
IT COULD BE WORTH
' OVER $1,500 TO YOU
PLUS FREE TUITION
ASSISTANCE TO ANY
WEST
VIRGINIA
COLLEGE OR AC
CREDITED BUSINESS
OR TRADE SC HOOL
'CONTINUE
YOUR
RETIREfloiENT BENEFI
TS HELP YOUR COM·
MUNITY IN TIMES OF
EMERGENCY
THE
NATIONAL GUARD
NEEDS YOUR
EX ·
PERIENCE . GOOD PAY,
GOOD BENEFITS. FOR
DETAILS CALL SSG ,
O'NEAL AT 1304 675 39501

'·"

Car salesman . Scnct
resume' to Bmc 179H . co

'" '"
"'weN ,.,,.y.

The Dally Sentmel,

11cn wora over Ult minimum 11 wtrtll 11 4 ct11t1
Ads unn int Oltltr ttlol't COOIICIItlwt flY I Will M Clltrlli If fM I fly

Court

I1o------~~:r~y_:~~~~:9_______ j

MOIIUI Momllllll 11141 'lf-'rd IIIII .,, 1c:cepltd on I., wit'- UtiiWitft
ctnl C'-Ortt fer •-• urrylne lo• NumDtr 11'1 C•rt tf TM
hnttnol
·

Street ,

OhiO 45769.

tn m1mory , Cord ot 1 11•nt1\ and PDIIu.trv o untl " ' wn, U .M
minimum Cotl'l fn Hv1nn

order 21

0

elderly. 992 6022

0

Ill

Pom eroy .

Full t ime and part t ime

bartendet Appl~ In person.
~

No phon ca lls No e:.:
jjcrlence cccssary Melqr;

~ Inn

Push &amp; sell pro
mower&amp;, rodlng tractors,
ATl.A!i - TIIIf!n
WEED EATER- Brush cutter &amp;
1r1mmers
STIHL- Brusn cvnen &amp; trim ·
SNAPPER -

I'

YAZOQ-H! wheel mowers
Wf! strlltCf!Whill we se ll I

Sm.111 Engtnes - Ou r Spectillt\'
104 Condor 51
Pomeroy, Oft

992 7314

DUMP TRUCK
Ph. 992-7201

(4 Bags limit Per Week)
PH 0 NE 992-7802

or 992·7443
2 13·1mo.

J ·S 1 mo

J 51 mo

landmark
l- 11 Hone Powf!r R•ding
Mow ..

31

Homes for Sale::._-

Beavt lful three bedroom
ran ch bnck hom e in Baum
Addtt10n, Pomero y, Ohto.
Gas heat, cen tral a.r Ca ll

992 2571 or 1-687 6429.

modern kttchen , ltvtng
room , dtn1ng room , off 1ce,
full basement , new heat
system wtth central atr,
unatt ached garage, 2
blocks from sc 11oo1. 992 ·

3443

Real Estate- General

Sells for $55.000.00

schools 3 bed roo ms,
stucco, ctiY water , bath,
natural gas furnace and
about one ac re , w•1h
young trees

ACREAGE - 42 acres
on Sdver Rtdg e Road . 2
etsterns, sept 1c sys tem.
barn and garage Some
t1mber and spnng fed
pasture Good buy at

$20.000 00
POMEROY -

L•r~ e

2

story hom e wtth wrap
around porch . Full base
ment . oit str eet parking
Asko~g

NICE

$26,500 00
STARTER

HANDYMAN - 2 level

HOME - 2 bedrooms,
gas tor ced a1r furna ce
Has nfce space for a
garden or trailer. Sell s

FAMILY HOME

Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone742· J111
Velma N•ctnsky, Assoc
Phon e 742-3092

lots and old 7 room
house on land cont ra ct.
Ctty water, elec tr1 c and
natural gas

5

bedrooms, new bath , 1
furna ces, carpet1ng ,
panel1ng and many
otrer n1cc new thtngs
Large ya rd, basement
and sun porch .

1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65,

for only $21,500.00

Sttlla few new Kerosene
Huler$
sn u
1 Only New Otl Sto ... e Closeout,
S.Jve
I
SISO . OO
,All ol the abowe tfems tn ••
eel lent condt lton All are pnced
tu sell tmmadtiltelv See us to

pet 1971 Cameron , 14 x 64,

'"
POMEROY
V
~LANDMARK

two bedrooms , new carpet
1972 Champion, 12 x 60, two

"""......
~ Main

bedrooms,
Cameron,
bedrooms,
Sky lm e,
bedrooms,

$13,000. 992·2055

~-

35
Lot.!_ &amp; Acreage
TRAILER LOT for sa le,
$4,000 00 992-2571

SEVE RAL choiCe build1ng
lots, Eastern 01stn ct.Tv p
pers PIC11ns· Chester water

Easy 'n' fiuick!

Ph 367-1560

1· 7

ROOFING

All types ol roof work ,
new or repa1r gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cleanmg and painhng
All work guaranteed.
Free Est1mates
Reasonable Pnces
Call Howard

949·2862

949·2160
2 4 tfc

choco late

brown

arm supplies
&amp; biVeStOEII

Very modern 3 bedroom
home I acre ground Close
to Orange 011ve School
Good residential area, very
pnvate, large garage, ctty
water , central atr Newly
remodeled . $350 month
All necessa ry hookups Or
sell on land contract wtth
reasonable down payment

61

__£_arm

42

12)(60, 2 bedroom Mobil e
Home Ra cine area 99'2,

5858

--

71

Ad~Uferre

992 3324

NEW LISTING - Han
dyman' s spectal . this
older home needs some
help, but will be a good
bet tor th e future,
located on a large ap
prox . 240)( 140 lot
3
bedrooms, dining room.
large front porch and

--

workshop
ONLY!
$13.000.
NEW LISTING
Close
1n and convenien t. Thts
home features a nice ltv
tng room and d11ng
room, basement wi th
garage and 2 bedrooms

$20.000
NEW LISTING - New
Constructton - 5 room
home with over an acre
land , 3 bedrooms, ut11t
ty, attached garage,
electrtc B B. hea t,

A

home to be proud of! 5
room home on over 1
acre . Fully insulated,
electric 8 B
heat 3
bedroms, utility , Also 2
garages Really n• ce

$37,500.
SMALL PRICE - BIG
VALUE - 2 bedroom

home with electric heat,
ltY ing room , dlntng
room, bath and utility
rooms. Over 1 acre land
10 minutes to town.

REALTOR

992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Dottle &amp; Roger Turner
992-5692
Jean Trussell 949·2660
O~FICE 992·2219

992 5949 or 992·9'175

l11 ~1 t!te lljhl . ltgh t touch ol

44

wannth w1th style'
So casual, comfm table. he II

li ve tn lh1s vest worked m a

srna!l

~fs1grr of teclangles

Kmt
of syntrftlc worsted- •! s QUICk

-

-

• Apartment
for Rent

Chevrol et

Col lege Rd
Syrilcvse ,

Ph. 992 3804

1980 Dalsun. fronl wheel
9854124
dnve, 4 speed , 12,000 mtles
1977 Ford Gra nada , 6 cy ltn ·
der , J speed, overd r ive

72

Trucks for Sale

1976 Chevy pt ckup tru ck,
will sell or trade for van or
eq ual value 992·7453 .

Three room etflclency
apartment S65 00 per wee k
or S250 00 per month W1t h
utilities paid 992 3097 or

au

after 5 phOne 992·3762 .

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.
CJ5
Jeep, new

cond. Asking $3 ,800 992
2859 or 992·2912 I

19 76 Ford van, Econoline,
150 V·B, power steering,
power brakes , good tires,

4S

days

Furn1shed Rooms

-----

Sleep1ng rooms; by the
we e k
Kitchen,
and
telcvts1on lounge. Ca rryout
s tor e and restaurant w lthtn

500 feel 992-6370.
.q6

Park . Rou te 33. North of
POmNOy , Large lOIS Call

992 7479.

Motorc~les

$250 00 Phone 992·5523

Space tor Rent

--.::...-Sern,..,..,.

-=

-~~ -

81

Wurlo , lnk&gt;ny ,

h~nhng

or

h.}p1 ng booh Aho Pn Shu 9011 cnut

togg rng \Mtl!.
we •lso Clll¥ 1 ~o mpt~l c !me ol llrown

fo~ mat ;~ond

ong 5portlng Good!

ALLSTEEL

J

Farm Buildings
Sizes
"From JO~~eJO"

SMALL

Utility ISuildinRS
Size.s from 4x6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
AI. 3, Box 54

Oh .

Ractne, Oh.

Ph. 614-841-2591
6 15 tfc

Home
1mprovemenrs

TRAILER spaces lor rent. REMODELING ,

doors.

til e.
Southern Vall ey Mobtlc pane lin g, ce tltng
Home Pa rk, Cheshtrc, Oh . floo rs, sid 1ng R. painttng . 25
vearsexpcrlcncc 992 2759
992 3954

1·13·1mo pd .

WILL DO ALL kinds of car

All Models
Ava1lable

pen try work , inclvdmg
panel,ng, cet1 1ngs, repatrs,
etc
Expenenced , with
ref erences. Phone 992 3941 .

LEO MORRIS
R t 1 Side Htll Rd

Rutland, Ot).

2·9 tfc

Wtll do carpenter work and
interior or ex terior pa.n·
ting . Free est• mates CALL

7160
Plumb1ng
Heatin2

8~

~&amp;

WATER

WELLS

Oomesttc and commerc ial.
pump sales and serv1ce
Tom
Lewis
Drilling
Seasonal dtscount on pvm

83

1974 XR75 Honda mOtor·
cyc le in good con dition.

COU NTRY I'I),OBILE Hon1e

6R0Wr-!ING

2211

ps 1 304 895 3802 or I 304
$900 oo or best offer. 992· 89S·3641
2876 affer 6 p m or 992-5218
74

We oiiH tar tal• lop ouahly bools anrl
1hOOS A rand nam @• t1kt!

chquard 992 6309 or 742·

ex haust , good tires, good

Four room apartment, fur
nished or unfurn ished
Phone 992 3092 or after 5

phone 992 3762

Gr 1l1ln ~ NowOpe n

• \loll l e.,on5 For •11A9n

Gene s Carpet Cll!aning,
deep stream ext ra c tiOn
Free
esttmated,
r easonabl e rates J scot

SEWING

73
19 78

• P u !long&amp; CIIIPP&lt;nt

Home - ---_ l_!!lpro_v_t_ments ....._

81

French Cttv Pa 1nting .
Resid enti aL co mmerctal ,
inter 1or ,
ex t er1or .
Speciai 1Z1ng in
lntenor
patntmg, paper hang ing &amp;
t extured ceilings
Free
esttmates J67 7184 or J67·

7605

•Shor!Game
Sptc o ~ I I III AI

~~==========~====~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
ARD

1979 Ford F150 4 x 4, power
sfee rmg, power brakes,
~our speed , &gt;351
engine,
lockout hubs Extras. 992·

rent 992-5908.

'.

: ....:\•

40625 St. Rt. 6~]

10·Hfc

Village Manor Apartments
I

~!

KWB

PH. 992-7119

992-5682

84

'

(ht$1er Oh

•S•dtng •I nsutation • Rooting •Storm Wmdows • Concrete Work • Septtc Systems
•Backhoe •Dump Truck - •Remodeltng
•New con s truction
•Guttering &amp;
Downspouts

992 6190or949·2614.

Four room apartment for

Stou TC~mpltll

CONSTRUCTION

9 A.M.·l:30 P.M.

c lasstc , power steeri ng,
powe r brakes, atr con
d1t•onn1g , auttomattc No

1-

at992·7787

•

..!,

DAVID BRICKLE$

1976 Chevy pi ckup W1ll sell
or trade tor van ot equal
va lve 992 7453

Alice Brooks
•
Needtecroft Dept.
.I 1 ..
The Daily Sentinel
Bo1 163, Old ChoiHI Sla., New
Y01~, NY 10113. Print Nome,
Address, Zip, Pottem NumbtT.
Calch on to the Cfalt boom' Send
Ia. our NEW1981 NHDLECRAn
CAIALOG Ower 17 1 des.gns 3
lree palle•ns " s1!e $ 1.00
ALL CRAn BOOMS•. $1.7S mh
134-14 q.tic• M1&lt;h1ne Quilb
llHIStUOII Homt QuittinJ
Ill-Quilt Oriainols
lll·Add 1 Bloc• Qutlb
llO.SwtltllfiShions·SIIts 31-56
129-Quic• 'n' Eosr Tt1nsfen
12Hnvelope PetchwOI• Quilts
127·Aiahons 'n' Doilies
126-Thrilty Ctalty Fiowen
125-Petll Qutlb
121·PIIIow Show·Ofk
llB·Crochet wllh Squares
11 Hast Art of Needlepoint
I U·Complote Alih~n~
112-Prlze Al!hans
111-EISJ Art of Hllitpin Crochet
110.16 lllfr Rup
IDI·lnsllnt Mac11mt
ID7·1nllaol S.Wlna
106·1nsllnt FIShion
IO.,Instlnl Moner
IDJ.l5 Qultb l01 Todor

THE
KOUNTRY

,;

2 23 I mo.

eas1 Palle111 7195 Men s S11es J..tnfurnished one bedroom
. a'partmcnt for rent Ren·
Jb 46 IIICiuded
ters as:;istance available
$2.00 101 each palleTn Add 501 tor sentor citizens. Contact
each pal!er n fOJ lust-c lass o
m·
mat! and handl•ng Send to:

~

~ t~#
'r,.l~
· '" .
f

JOYCE ELECTRICAL
SUPPLIES

Hrs. : Mon .· Fn .

Malibu

1

ts Phone 992·5434

2 23 1 mo .

Restdent1al &amp; Ltght
Commerc•al Ele.ctrtcal
S"opltes
Quality Products
Reasonable Pr1ce s

-Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair

'

1975 Mercury Marqui s, two
door. low mtleage, e~
ce ll en t conditton $1690.00
firm 742 2734

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap

Closed Thursdays
Stop .nand see our hne
of plasterer aft You can
emov makmq vour qtfts
and help f1ght 1nflat1on
Located ne~t to Dale
Htll Ford Tractor tn
Pomeroy

ELECTRICAL
SUPPLIES

Pomeroy, Oh.

19 76 Plymouth Valore
wagon, a•r cond1tionmg,
clc , very ntce. $1500.00
Glen B1sse11 at 949·2801 or

742 2451

Mobile
hom e.
two
bed room, on nver front ,
nice yard, vtilittes pa td

Mon.·Wed. 10:00·9: 00
Tues.· Fri .- Sat.

1 !6 1 mr

992-6211 or 992-7314

992 7001
2 bedroom Mobtle Home.
Adults onty
Brown 's
Trader Court , Mtner svtlle

• New Homes - lex·
tensive remodeling
• E lectnca I work
• Roofing work
12 years
Experience I
Greg Roush
Ph. 992· 7583

ROGER HYSEU'S
GARAGE

Autos for Sale

1974

THE DABBLE SHOP
NOW OPEN

~:::::::::::::::::::j~:::::::::::::::::::±::::::::::::~::::~

su lky 9927605.

rusf A·1 cond•t•on $97S.oo
Two bedroom
mobile
home , co~
l ete ly
fur
n1sh
po
requtred
992 2749

2 8 lfc

10 :00 5:00

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

V.C. YOUNG II

~~pment

949 2860

Mob1le Hom es
for Rent

Call 742-3195
or 992-7680

no money down
F edera l Hou sm9 J% on S2S,OOO
5% on balance
conventional LoansS%
down
Call lor lf\formahon
992·7544

( FreF Estimates)

1976 GraVely convertible,
dua l wheels, electric start,
e1ghf speed, 30' mower,

985 4326 or 667 6394.

Si)( room house and bath
with vt111ty roorn
Ct ty
water and gas S1 50 00 per
month w 1th $50.00 depos1t

Let George Miller check
your present electrical
system.
Res1dential
&amp; Commerctal

VA loans -

- "'ddons and
remodeling
- Root.ng and gutter
work
-concrete work
-Plumbing and
electrical work

Brutrals
H ovses lor Rent

CUNNtNGHAM
&amp;.ASSOC.
Mortgage Bankers

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

Registered tratned walker
18 months old S75 9' 2·7001
Mal e

lfc

H. L WHITESEL

Pets for Sale

56

poodle 992-6260

41

For all of your wir·
ing needs .

992-7544

Wa ter ~Se wer·E lectnc
Gas Ltne·Oitches
Water Ltne Hook-ups
Septic Tanks
County Certtfted
Roush Lane
Cheshtre, Oh .

For Your DirectoiJ
on How to Purchase.

NEW LISTING ·- 45

dishwasher $37,500.
NEW LISTING -

*V

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

CALL 602-941-8014
Ext. No. 4796

t

NOW IS THE TIME TO
CALL A REAL TOR TO
SELL YOUR PROPER·
TV. TRY 992·3!25 or
992-3876

992-2181
Pomeroy

AVAILABLE
THROUGH
GOVERNMENT
AGENCIES,
MANY SEll
FOR UNDER
S20CJ.OO

1974 Skyline Mob ile Home.
$5,500. 1/ 2 acre lot all set up.

2571 .

st.

JEEPS, CARS,
TRUCKS

eluded. $~500 00 247 3942.

Acreage One acre and one
halt of ground loca ted bet
ween old Rt 33 and new Rt
33
tac1n g the Me 1gs
Fa1rgrounds 54000 00 992

245-9113

r,~=========~

1975 VI KING Mobtle Home,
12~65
1n excellent con·
dit1on, underptnnlng 1n

---

KEN SOLES

Expert pamtmg, body
work, pinstnpmg &amp;
vmyl tops.
Free Estimates
Calf 992·3421
Kmgsbury Rd .1 2 mt .
west Co. Rd 18
Pomeroy,Oh. 457 69
Domestic , Japane ~e &amp;
European
cars &amp;
Trucks.
2 · 15 ~rho

n _

4424

1~~=========~ 991
Owner
5869 wtl l help f inance .

acres
1n
Rutland
Townsh•P brtars. brush,
Leading Cree K water,
electric and minerals
RESTFUL &amp; NICE Modern 3 bedroom
home has dining w1th
slid1ng glass door to
pat•o Garage, sta in less
s1nk , 2 full ba1hs and
large vard .n a n1ce set
t1ng .

Free Estimates

Aelri ger &lt;~ lor

three bed i OOms, new car

1969 PMC 3 bed room
tra il er lh:60 992 3954

7 2 acre s
bedroom home. 2
systems and ~
taps Located on
Run Road Was

Headquarters

Phone
H614l-9?2-3325
NEAR TOWN - and

........... - - - - - ·

Mobtle Homes
for Sale

REDUCED -

OFFICE 742·2003
GeorgeS. Hobste1ter Jr .
Broker

acres, mtnerals. old
house and two barns

T

- .....

w•th 2
septic
wat er
Hysell

REALTY

Housing

VIRGIL B . SR. ~ I Ail Oil
16 E. Second Street

-

new
12 carpet
x 60 , 1976
two
all electric 1971
12sx 6), two
bath &amp; II:J, new
c arpet
19 70
PMC ,
12 x 60, two bedrooms, new
carpet . B x S Sa les, 1nc ,
2nd x Vtand Street, Pomt
Pleasan t, WV Phqne 675

$21 ,500 00 Now only
$19,000 00
LOTS OF LAN 0 - 188

EAFORDrn

-

7 rooms &amp; bath, full SIZe at
ttc1 3 r oom basement In
Pomeroy 99 2· 7001
__
__ __ __

l2

ATTRACTIVE hom e on
two and one halt acres
Prtva te settmg on St Rt 7
by M emory Gardens Ter
ms 992 7741

!- Good Hotpomt Washer
1- 2S" GE TV
1- Hcu II Holgotnt

·---.
Homes for sate

31

H&amp;R BODY SHOP MILLER ELECTRIC
Body Repa1r · Insurance
SERVICE
work · Colhsion Repatr

DENNEY
CHAIN LINK
FENCE

Repossessed
Items

IN
can

992 6338

$16,200

Bedford Township
and
Flatwoods Area
$5.00 Per Month
WeeklY Pickup

Pomeroy

W1ll do paneling, ceding,
floor t11 e, plvmbtng . Free
est tmat es Fred M1ller at

·

HART'S
TRASH HAULING

Backhoe
Excavating
Septic Systems
Water, Sewer &amp; Ga s
L1nes
Ltcensed &amp; Bonded

PH 9911975

ow At

Trained and ex

•
•
•
•

m•n

Will care for the elderly in
t •o:d"iurphlloems. e. Wom en. men, or

Heney E. Cleland, Jr .

I

UJ

rat•

Mail ThiS Coupon wtth Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
Box 729

Circle Sa los, P 0

Box 224· 0 , Ri cllmond H ill ,

n-W•r~ted to '"'"

13 _ _ _ _ _ _ __

3S - - - - - - - - - - -

PLY

mowers

Two Jack Kramer tennis
racQuets. Four and three
eig hths light. tour and one
half light . Excellent con
di llon $25 .00 each. 992-5523

0

Vacancy . Room,
laundry for the

_

u -- Sp•ce ltr tttt~t

)1- A . . I E1l.tl1 W•nfed

Wilnt·Ad Ad\lertlslng

Pomeroy-Mtddleport area.

742·2288.

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

GRAVElY - Walk t:u~ htnd
&amp;
r•Omg trac:tors Push &amp; sell pro

S30 load del ivered. 992
5240.

2686

li- Loh&amp; ollcr .. te
l7~ Ntllton

elderlY people. Rutl•nd·

~ LADY or girl to live in 992

•t - wanttd to II tnt
d - EQutpmeflt lor II !tnt

n-

dayt1me helptng

tn

Mtsc:-Mer chanise
------

Firewood for sale . Har·
dwood, sp l1t &amp; delivered .

Hom"

6 Auclton
9- W~tntal to Buy

S4

Housing .
Headquarters

-_tte!p Wanjed

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

949 2129 or 992·

6040

HAVE
board,

1.'

767 3167 or 557·3411 .

TRIMMING and

Work

Business Services

Call 614·

co 1n col lections

as a young bus! ness person
1 and earn good monev plus
, some great gifts as a Sen
• ttnel route earner . Phone
us right away and get on ~~~a!~
the el1Qib11 1ty ltst at 992
2156 or 9'12· 2157

eRENTALS

1- C•rO of Ttt•ntu

TREE
removal

~nttqUeS

guns, pocket watches and

Wanted

GET VALUABLE training

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
eANNOUNCEMENTS

14 - - - - - - - - - - - - -

"call992 7760

WANT AD INFORMATION

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Wanted
For Sale
Announcement
For Rent

furnttvr e, desks, gold
·· r•ngs , jewelry , silv e r
dollars, sterling, etc . Wood
1ce boxes, 1ars, ant1ques.
ere . com plete households.
Write . MD Miller , Rt 4,
Pomeroy, OH 45769 Or

1.-·-------------------------,

Name----------

Rd ,

·~\Old

BIG shootmg match at the
corn Hollow gun club, Sun
day March 8th Starts at 12

4

Pi~llet

~·

Ace Hardware at Mil l
Street tn MiddleporT 1S now
sell .ng hvntmg and fishing
li scense

YOUR

ton

Pomeroy 992 2689.
... IRON
AND BRASS BEDS

Rummage sale at Mtd
dleport Masont c Temple
March 3, 4, S 9 J

---

on largest

slab
SlO SO t per
Det1vered to OhiO
~ ~o, Rock Springs

3941 or 669·4535

rOft'T.f'Oit£:

~oA P,

14"

end Sl2 SOperton. Bundled

of penny pinching?"
Housewives and motheh,
change spare time intoSSSS
Flexible hours , excellent
earnings, free wardrobe
Two evenings a week For
more informafton call 092

wr.te your own ad and order by m.:td w•th lh1s
coupon Cancel your ad by phone w tt en you get
results Money not refundable

I
I
I

·"CHIP WOOD . Poles max

.~ .. diameter

T~red

.------------------------,

I1
1

882 2079 .

669 3785.

RACINE GU N SHOOT , appotntment January Mar
Rac.n e Gun Club, every ch 992·2264, 992 2802, 9'12
Friday n1ght starttng at 2360 or 992 2639 Hi_ston es
sale
Pomeroy
7 30 p m Fac tory choKe for
Middleport Ltbranes
guns only

l

Wanted to Buy · class nngs,
, weddtng bands, anything
_stamped, I OK, 14K, or 18K
gold S11ver cotns, pocket
watches Call Joe Clark at
. 992 ·2054 at Clark' s Jewelry
Store, Pomeroy , Ohio 45769

per bushel Other
vanettes at S4 00 per bushel
and up Fitzpatrick Or
chard, St Rt. 689. Phone

MEIGS MUSEUM open by

I

Ser.oce.

Master Keying,
Com
b1nations, Bonded Call
New Haven, W Va . (304)

S3 75

S#E:A6-o

l..!.___,.~ituations

11

pay cash or certtfted check
for antiques and collec·
tibles or entire estates.
Nothtng too lllrge. Also, ''\.-~,....-------,.----~--------..,.,-,-,........,,_...._ __,.1

Insurance

silver Call J . A Wamsley,
• Treasure Chest Co•n Shop.
Athens, OH 594· 4221

APPLES : golden delicious,

4 _ _ _ __:__ _

435
Fet:der steers Good and Choice 250 tu 300 lb!J
71·79, 300 to 400 lb.!i 69-71, 400 lu OOI'l lbs ~7 50,
500 lu 600 lbs 57-.65 :w&gt;, 600 to700 lbs 55-63 00 , 700
toiiOO lbs 51 SIHiO; 800 and over 4!1.50-57 ~
fo ct!&lt;Jer He1fers : GOOd and Cholt'e 250 to300 lb.1.
6().70; 300 tu .fOO lb:i 57-.e2 SO; 400 to 500 I!&gt;II 57·
63 50, SOO to 600 lbs. S&lt;HiO 60010700 lbs 41\-5.'1 50
700 tolkXIl!Js 45.:i0-51 , 800 aud liver 43 S0-52 50
f't.'t'der Bulls Good and Chol~ 250 io 300 IbM.
7~77 . 50 J 300to400lbs 64-73, 400to )OOJtl.'l. M-70 ,
500 tu600 lbs. 3-4-63, 600 to700 lbs. ~; 700 to 800
lbs 42 51}-51 ; 800tuHJ Over 42.50-S2 50.
and bulls 300to800 I~

-~

3. - , - - - - . , - - -

MARKET Rf:PORT
Prices t.aken from the auction of S;~tur&lt;.lay
.fo'ebruYry 2B Trends Veal CY!vessteady Cow ~
$50 to $! Juwer Ft!eder ct~ Uie slelldy. Tole! I head

Hu l::~tcinstcers

tfl/~1'1,1

Announcements

2

Ohio Valley Uvt=shd. Co

PART r::\? '&gt;OU

12) 26, (3)5, 1 2 . ~9 . 26

Meigs
Property Transfers
Gary 0. Hostetter to Nonnan
Yost, Wtlham H. Loy, Michael
Caryl, Hoy Shingleton, Parcel,
Ohve.
Gary 0. Hostetter to Norman
Yost, William H Loy, Michael
Caryl, Hoy Shingleton, Parcels,
Olive.
Milford B. Hall, Dorothy G. Hall to
Carl E. South, Inc., Rtght of Way,
Ohve.
Conunumty Bank of Parkersburg
to Kenneth Eugene Tolhver, Carol
Lee Tolliver, Parcels , OUve.
Curtis Ward, Margaret A. Ward to
Robert Jewell, Sharon Jewell, Lot 4,
Hamsonvtlle.
Byron Batley and Columbta Gas of
Oh., Inc., Columbus Gas Trans.
Corp ., Agree. I Ease., Bedford.
Daniel O'Dell and Columbia Gas
of Oh., Inc., Colwnbta Gas Trans.
Corp., Agree. Ease. , Bedford.
Owen Damewood and Columbta
Gas of Oh., Inc., Columbta Gas
Trans. Corp., ! Ease., Chester.

.,

ADS ?

Secretary needed tor con·
f1eld office Apply
m person to Bob Campbell,
Ontarto
Plping , Second
Street, Racine, Ohio45771

Sentinel-

TheDa

ATTENTION ·
liM
PORTANT TO YOU) Will

Homes for Sale
&gt;QLD COl NS, pocket wal· 31
------':t hes, ~lass nngs, wedding 3 BEDROOM,
2 ba th ,
bands, diamonds Gold or

A?nouncements

5.!__ _

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ' "

~fru c tion

SAle

GOLD,
SI LVER,
PLATINUM, STERUillG·
-COINS, RINGS,JEWELR
Y, Ml SC I'PEMS AB ·
MARKET
SOLUTE
PRICE GUARANTED ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPOR T,
OHI09'12·3476 .

Moddleporl.

Ohto 1he V •ll age acqu1red
t.tle to satd r eal estate by
deed recorded 1n Volurve
270, page 703, M e•gs Courfty
Deed Records
Sale of sa1d real estate
was authon ~ed by Or
dmance adopted Janua r y
12, 1981
The vtllage
reserves the n ght to rej ec t
any and all b1ds The sale tS
pursuant to Section 721 03
of th e Ohto Rev•sed Code

3

Anti smoking

of

I 'L L JUST TAI&lt;E: THE SOCIETY
SOCTION · IS THIS 1').4E. STORE:

Help W~_nled-_

Lost
your
PO radio stat ton from Mtd celled?
dleport hill. Watch tor operator's li cense? Phone
Stgns, ram or shine. Baby 992·2143.
clothes, rocki ng horse,
rccltrfmg super swing, lots 18
Wanted to Do
of other mtsc. items
Furnace repatrs , elec trical
work, plumb tng, mobile
.9
Wanted to Buy
home or res1dence 992
. WANTJi'D TO BUY : 5858

bedroom mobile
near Cheshire .

LOCI$,SMITH

II

PORCH SALE : ~aT,ura,ay,
AUTOMOBILE
.' March 7th from 9·5
11rst road left pasl the WM SURANCE been

deposit 367 7811.

l

Yard

7

$150 oo per month, $50.00

They'll Do It Every Time

posSibly

blind Found in the Miner·
sv1 IIC Htll area . If know
,whose dog th•s may be
please contact 992·2724

Small investment, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads
Public Notice

shy ,

Ohio

-

-~-

E

-- --

cavating

COMPLETE se ver 1n
sta11at1on &amp; backhoe ser
vice for Rac•ne Syracuse
sewer distrlc1. Dozer work

iI needed 949 2293 .

Dozer work Sma ll !Obs a

specialty M 2753.
85

General Hauling

J&amp; C San1tatton Servtce.
Trash p• ckup available In
Vtllage ot M td dl eport

Phone 992 5016 or 9927597

anytime

E lectncal
&amp; Refngerat.on

MA CHINE

Repatr s,
servtce,
a ll
mak es 1 992 22 84
T he
Fabrl c Shop, Pomeroy
Avthanzed Singer 1 Sales
and Serv 1ce. We sharpen·
Scissors

OUR BOARD ING HOUSE

84

Electrical
&amp; R_e!ngerat~n _

ELWOOD

BOWERS

REPA IR
sweepers ,
toasters, tran s, all smr~ll
app liance s. Lawn mower .
Nex t to Sta te Htghway
Garage on Route 7, 985·

3825

�Sentinel

Man's body
pulled from

ELBERFELDS 'IN POMEROY

Ohio River

FRIDAY-SATURDAY SPECIAL.$

The body ot a West Columbia man
was found in a car pulled from the
Ohio River Wednesday morning by
Ravenswood, W.Va. police.
The victim, identified as William
Eldon See. 42, apparently died when
his car plunged into the river Sunday evening after he failed to make
a curve in the highway.
Dragging operations began Sunday night.
The car entered the water at the
site of an old ferry landing. The car
was found approximately 200 feet
down stream from where it entered
the water.
Born July 30, 1933 al Hartford, the
victim was the son of Emma Ellen
Pringle See of Point Pleasant and
William Edwin See of GallipQiiS
Ferry, W. Va.
Other survivors include a son,
Tilhothy Allen See of Glenwood; two
sisters, Wilma Mae See of Point
Pleasant and Mrs. Thelma Cam!&gt;"
bell of Gallipolis Ferry; three
brothers, Everett, Columbus; Roy of
Hogsett and James of Chicago, Ill.
He was preceded in death by a
brother, Robert, in 1971.
Funeral services will be held at
1:30 p.m. Saturday at Wilcoxen
Funeral Home in Point Pleasant
with Rev. Odell Bush officiating.
Burial will be in Kirkland Memorial ·
Gardens. Friends may call at the
funeral home after 5 p.m. Friday.

HOSPITAL :\EWS

J

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES MARCH 4
Mrs. Randall Adkins and son,
Robert Baker, Patricia Britton,
Elma Caldwell, Douglas Clonch Jr.,
Jamie Davies, Wanda Deweese, Jill
Evans, Douglas Fields, James
Grant, Beverly Hale, Jayme Hudson, Albert Hutchinson, ·Beulah Jarvis, Susie Kelly, Larry Lee Jr ..
Brandon Lusher, David Malone.
Billy Matthews, Marie Meal, Mrs.
Lewis Pearson and son, Mary
Rouse, Mr~_, David Roush and son,
David Rutherford , James SmJth,
Deborah St. Clair; Jayroe Tillis.
BIRTH
Mr. and Mrs. Randy Baker, Oak
Hill, son.

\

Area Death

\

Samuel A. Gibbs

CARPEl SPECIALS
-Brown/Black/White Plaid

3 95

SPECIAL S

'13

-Heavy Jute Backing
-Reg. 117.00 sq. yd.

1-ii~;;_.·--~-·_.--.S~A~L~f;--_.·~-~-r---~~---·~S;P~E~C~IA;L~~G~R~O~U~P=-·--~-·_.·~
.

FRANKLIN CONVICTED- Avowed raclstJooeph Paul Franklin
is led from the courts bulldlllg Wednesday night alter being convicted
on federal charges of violating the civil rights of two young ~lack
joggers by shooting them to death as they left a public park. Tbe men
on either side of Franklin are federal marshals. (AP Laoerpboto)

One person was injured and heavy
damages were incurred to a vehicle
as the result of an accident on West
Main St. at I :23a.m. Thursday.
Pomeroy Police said a westbound
car driven by Keith Phalin, Route 3,
Pomeroy, went out of control hitting
a utility pole. A passenger, DoUg
Phalin, was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad. He suffered a
pQsslble broken leg.
There were heavy damages to the
car and the driver was cited on a
reckless operation charge.

HuiiiPU~

REG. '15.00 .... SALE '11.99

MR. LEGGS JEANS

Allv loca tioo - whe)tJef
voo're ot' to the otflce iJI
0\,J t on lhe town -. yC&gt;J 11
a~ectote tha com1011
ord quahty lt\QI t~ove
mode Husr"l Pt.Jppo&amp;s'

REG. 117.00 .... SALE 113.59

REG. 116.95. .

REG. 123.00 .... SALE 118.39

LEE RIDER JEANS

REG ..125.00 .... SALE 119.99

REG. 122.95

on location

cosuots

IQmOIJ~

Just tne

ngnttoucn ol Cla ss com

Dined wrrn a m'Orl ~enStt
o1 stvi4:J Ana vou don l

~-

I .'
1

~·

·""

··-·- f\
"'""' "' , . 0

~.. ·"'·

~r

\..'. )

J

·~

REG . $2.00

~""

SALE 79'

SHOE BOX

,.

FOU..OWS CHART - Joe Thelsmann, Washington Redskin quarterback, uses something familiar, a football, to trace the money pledged
during Thursday's Tri-State Leadership dinner In Gallipolis. In all,
$1C, 790 was pledged.

I
..
••

LD.

$1899

WINONA, Ohio - Sheriff's authorities in Columbiana County say
$100,000 wbrth of drugs and lab processing equipment confiscated
earlier this week is the largest drug raid in the county's history.
Authorities said they took 13, :&gt;-foot-high suspected marijuana plants
and varying amoWJts of PCP, I..SD and cocaine from a rural horne
Wednesday night. The raid capped a six-montp investigation.
Two men and a woman were apprehended at the house .

Save 20% on quality Lane Lovechests.
Protective cedar lined - quality construction - upholstered top styles.
Pine - oak · cherry - pecan · cedar.

Reagan wants to cut legal aid

20% OFF

WASHINGTON - President Reagan, who clashed with a poor
peoples' legal aid group when he was governor of California, is calling
for elimination of all federal money for free legal help for the poor.
Reagan's budget proposals lor 1982 also would give states direct control for the first time over 4() health and social programs - such as rat
control and alcohol abuse - but provide 25 percent less money from
WashingtOh to run them .

LAY -AWAY FOR JUNE GRADUATION!

REG. $4.00

SALE 11.59
REG . $7 .00

Winning Ohio lottery number

SALE 12.79

BARGAINS

8 in. Steel Toe

'

LANE CHESTS

Special group of earrings , chains, hair
combs, necklaces, _
bracelets and rings .

THE

!

SALI'

JEWELRY
CLEARANCE

~

Black Palenl
Navy Parent

$1399

'

Confiscate drugs, equipment

· ~-- - , j~

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Richard Deem, Mid·
dlepQrt. .
Discharged-Carl Fulton, Ellen
Stewart, Juanita Chapman, Brenda
Pettit, Mildred Nash, Cecil Brad-

Basic straig'ht leg
style, pre-washed, 14
ounce denim. Sizes 27
to 38 waist, 30 to 36
inch length .

SPRING COLORS IN
STRETCH GABARDINE.
SIZES 3 THRU 20.

i

FREE CLINIC SET
A free blood pressure clinic will be
held ·Tuesday, March 10, from 10
a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Harrisonville
Town Hall sponsored by the Senior
Citizens Club of Harrisonville.
. Everyone is invited to attend.

MEN'S DENIM JEANS

JUNIOR
SLACKS

CLEVELAND - The winning nwnbers selected Thursday night in
the Ohio LAlttery's daily game "The Number" and the weekly

REG. $12.00

Dress Wellington

SALE 14.79

WORK BOOT

"$35

FILES SUIT
Johnna Rhodes, Bidwell, filed suit
in Meigs County Conunon Pleas
&lt;;:ourt in the amount of $52,736 against Donald W. Price, Rt. I, Cheshire.
The suit is for injuries, medical ex·
penses and loss of work as a result of
an accident on Pomeroy's East Main
Street June 22, 1980.

SQ. YD.

-3 Popular Colors
-12 FT. Width - 100% Nylon

Installed
wl'l&gt; Inch Foam Pad

Three calls were answered by
95
local units Wednesday and Thursday
morning, the Meigs Emergency
Sole. NeoPrane
Medical Services reports.
Pull 01'), American
All Leather
At 2:44 p.m. Wednesday, the MiddlepQrt Unit took Doug Morrison
from Pearl St. to Veterans Memorial
, OH.
Hospital and at 12:40 p.m., the
Rutland Unit took Rolland Stiles, ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I
Langsville, to Holzer Medical Cen- I
ter. The Pomeroy Unit at 1:31 a.m.
Thursday took Keith Phalin, from
We'•• jlllt •
the scene of an accident on West
Main St., to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

PROBE THEFT
Pomeroy Police are investigating
the theft of a 1974 one-half ton pickup
truck from near the Twin City
Machine Shop.
Police said the vehicle was st-&lt;en
between 10 p.m. Wednesday and 7:30
a.m. Thursday. Owner is Bill Miller,
Pomeroy. A key broken off in the
ignition enabled the thief to start the
vehicle, police said.

By DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
OVP News Editor
Despite last year's gloomy
economic picture and today's uncertainty, community and business
leaders Of the tri-county area were
generous Thursday riight as $14,790
was pledged during the ann11a1 ·
Leadership Gifts Dinner for the Tri
State Area Council Of th~ Boy Scouts
of America.
The money was raised during a 15
minute session led by Dean Epling,
M-G-M district chairman. Highlight
· Of that event was the auctioning of a
football autographed by the
evening's guest speaker, Joe
Theismann, quarterback for the
Washington Redskiris of the
National Football League.

HIGH/LOW SCULPTURED CARPET

MEN'S

NAME DELEGATION
Envoy and Mrs. Ray Wining of the
Meigs Salvation Army delegated
several officers and soldiers to attend the Athens Corps Wednesday
for inspection and council.
From the local unit were Bettie
McGuire and Major Glenna Rummel (R) at the morning session and
Major Rummel, Eloise Adams,
Sally Landers, Edith Spencer, Rhonda Proffitt, and Jackie Justis at the
evening review.
Major and Mrs. George Payton Of
the Cincinnati headquarters were
the inspecting officers for the corp;
review. The Athens Home League
was in charge of a potluck dinner.

scouting
area
.
surpasses '81 goal

-Slightly Irregular

SPECIAL

"Pyramid" game are :

The Nwnber - 239
Pyramid - 115; 430; 2769
The lottery repQrted earnings of $130,738.50 from the wagering on
the daily number game drawing. Lottery officials said sales prior to
the drawing totaled $1,015,183.50, and holders of winning tickets are
entitled to share $884.445.

COATS AND CLARK

$1 49 WINTUK
YARN
3'11 ounce skeins · 4 ply hand knitting y~rn . B lg
color selection . Mothproof , non allergenic . Save
Friday and SaTurday ,

1 19

f

TUBE SOCKS

Weather

Men' s sizes 9 to 15, Boys 7 to 11 .
Whife with colored stripe tops.
Made by Sprlngfoot.

99~

Skein

Variable cloudiness through SatUrday. Lows tonight in the mid-20s.
Highs Saturday near 4()_Chance of precipiatlon 20 percent tonight and
Saturday. Northwesterly winds around 10 mph tonight.
,

Pr.

Extended Ohio Forecast - Sunday through Tuesday: Fair through
the period. Highs in the upper 30s to rnid-!Os Sunday, rising to the mid4()s to lower 50s Monday and Tuesday. LAlws in the lower 20s Sunday
morning and in the upper 20s to low 30s Monday and Tuesday.

CHILDREN'S JACKETS
.

L ined ;ackets , unlined iackefs. tl1e papular " bub le-gum"
jackets and zipper·front sweat shirt jackets. Sizws 12 mas
to24r'nos .• 2 to4, 4 to6)( , 7 to 14.
·

Theismann, in order to "sweeten

the pot," threw in two tickets to a
Washington game and dinner for two
at his Washington Restaurant.
A vigorous bidding effort followed
between Dl'. Dave Carr, Point
Pleasant physician and scout leader,
and Ronald Atkinson, a Gallipolis
CPA.
Dr. Carr was the buyer with a
$1,000 bid.
·Epling expressed thanks from all
scouting personnel for the pledges
which he said showed extreme
respect for the Boy Scouts of
America.
He also thanked Miles Epling and
Don Swisher Of Peoples' Bank, Point
Pleasant, . for their suppOrt and
llnancial assistance in sponsoring

ByKATIECROW
A proposal increasing gas rates in
the village of Syracuse was sub-

t
\

I

- ,/

I \ i

~

WESTERN SHIRTS
LOn!J ,1nd short sleeve styles . e•
t ellen t r&lt;tnge ol plltterns .t~nd

asset. You'll lind us

I U 1~ 1 1) , mlld i um CIS
l arQf' f i61&amp; 111 , x l.:~r oe
I 17 II' , !
15' 1 ) .

h1ndy 1nd friendly .

Com• in!

,.

S14.95 Western
·~
1

6 MONTH MONEY MARKET

14.383%
Substantial Penalty for Early Withdrawal

SHIRTS . ...... . $12.69
S16.9S Western
SHIRTS . . ..... . $14.39

A Point Pleasant man was barrel of a gun," according to a
arrested on a felonious assault sheriff's
spokesman.
Leach
charge following a Thursday af- allegedly held the gun on Pearspn
ternoon incident on the Silver from the passenger's side, and then
Memorial Bridge.
left the car, coming around to face
Galli a County sheriff's deputies Pearson.
cited Lome J. Leach, 29, after he
The department said Leach then
reportedly held a gun on Henderson took Pearson's gun and ordered hi!n
police chief Gene Pearson on the to stand against the cruiser.
Ohioside.of the bridge around 3 p.m.
However, Pearson had notified the
According to tile sheriff's depart- Mason County Sheriff's Department
ment, Pearson followed a car Leach and Point Pleasant police, who then
was riding in onto the bridge. Pear- arrived on the scene.
so~ wanted to question Leach in conLeach then surrendered and was
nection with a hit-skip accident in taken to the Lawrence County jail by
the village.
Gallia deputies, and faced arraignThe car and the cruiser stopped on ment in Gallipolis Municipal Court
the Ohio side of the bridge. Pearson today.
then left his cruiser and went to the
driver's £ide of the olher car, asking
for the driver's identification.
"Then he was staring down the

Riffe urges
completion
of highway

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - House
Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr. is urging
state transportation officials to complete lhe Appalachian Highway
across southern Ohio within two
years.
The New Boston Democrat is expected to meet with officials of the
Ohio Department of Transportation
to reinforce his request before a
possible vote Tuesday by the House
Finance Conunittee on a one-year,
$679 million budget for the
beleaguered agency.
·
" That Appalachian Highway
should have been completed a long
time ago," he said.
His insistence that the project be
finished came as the House and
Senate adjourned for the week
following noor sessions in which
they disposed of a few relatively
routine items.
Rep. Myrl H. Shoemaker, 0Bourneville, said the finance panel,
which he heads, was to vote on the
transportation budget Thursday. Action was delayed, however, until the
highway construction issue was
resolved.
Quick action by the lower chamber would send the transportation
spending document to the Senate for
pQssible inclusion of a gasoline tax
ltike. ODOT officials said the extra
revenue Is needed to adequately
met•ln the state's roads.

S19.9S Western

-

SHIRTS . ..... .. S16.89

SPRING

Made bv Wrangler - Neck
sizes 14V2 to 20 . Sleeve
lengths 33 to 36 inches. Pre·
shrunk , sna· front, 2 snap
flap pocke ts, snaps on wrist

SAVE

THIS WEEKEND

$1588

•

SAUl

)

BLAZER SALE

- ~·

..

•

Special weekend sale of blazers
by famous makers like Devon, '

Douglas MARC , Trissl, Bradley
and Cos Cob.

=1:181
Bank
3RD ST., RACINE, OH.
Member FDIC

Misses sizes 8 to 20
Extra sizes 38 to U.

REG . l3.00 ... ... . .
REG . U3.00 . , .....
REG . $40.00 . .• ....
REG . $56 .00 .......

SALE $11.39
SALE $26.39
SALE U1.99
SALE $44.79

·r

MEN'S LEATHER BllTS

I

Full grain bridle cowhide leather.
Sizes 32 to 50. Removable buckle.
$5.95 Leather Belts 1'14" wide ..• $4.88
$6.95 Leather Belts 1:1/4" wide ... 55.68

OPEN SATURDAY 9:30-5100

.
•
.
'
.
•
:

STAFF - Current staff members of the Meigs
CoUDiy Department of Hcallb Is now located In the new
multipUrpose buDding to Pomeroy. They are, front, I to
r, Debbie Lavalley, R.N., W.l.C. Director; Norma
Torre•, R.N., nursing supervisor; Nancy Ackerman,
clerk; Mary Cleek, W.I.C. clerk; back row, I tor, Carol
TIDOehill, R.N., we'll child program; Annie Moon,

,

We need to carry on our scouting
program and go over our silstalning
membership goal because of a drop
in fWlds from the United Way." Continuing, McGinnis reviewed the
cOWlcil's budget totaling $305,000.
Guest speaker Thelsmann then
combined humor with humility to
drive home several points to the
crowd.
Beginning his talk with personal
episodes in his scouting career, the
former Notre Dame star then spoke
directly to the parent, urging him to
give his young man or young lady an
oppQrtWlity."The best way to impress your children is by example
not words. Words are cheap.
Become active with your children,
play and work with them, don't
ignore them, don't let them feel left
out," he said.
Theissrruin then related his own
boyhood, college days and his
current prb career with his family
relationship.
The former All-American
described his early awakening in the
(Continued on page 7)

Point Pleasant'man
faces assault charge

·WESTERN
SHIRTS
cuff.

In his speech, he said,"We're all
here because we believe in kidS,".

.

( OI O r ~

Small

we're here".

milled to council Thursday night by
James Diddle, president of·Syracuse
· Home Utilites Company.

NEW SELECTION

CONVENIENT LOCATION: 1 grut

the dinner held at Oscar's
Restaurant.
. .
Goal for this year's event was
$11,000.
Prior tQ Theismann's address,
Robert H. McGinnis, council
e11ecutive for the Tri-state Area
Council gave a talk entitled "Why

HAPPY BUYER- Point Pleasant's Dr. Dave Carr, right, smiles after paying $1,000 for an autographed football from Washington Redsklos'
quarterback Joe Thelsmann at Thursday's M-G-M Leadership Dinner In
Gallipolis. In addition to lbe hall, Dr. Carr gets two tickets to a Redsklos'
game and a dinner at Thelsrnann's Restaurant.

Council receives gas hike - propos~

SALE$3.75 ....... . ... .. ....... SALE$3.18
REG.$5 .00 . .. . ................ SALE$4.28
REG. $9.QO ... ................. SALE S7.68
REG. $15.00 ....... . .... , ..... SALE $12.78
REG. $21.00 .................. SALE $17.88

MEN'S

15 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper .

-100% Nylon Pile

-12' Width

95

2 Sections, 12 Pages

rJPftS'~~I M-G-M
-

I G·~·..

•

enttne

Pomeroy-MiddleJ&lt;ort, Ohio, Friday, March 6, 1981

8()1

Rubber backed LMI loop Carpet

•

a-1

225

'Copyrighted 1981

WAREHOUSE

Samuel A. Gibbs, Jr. , 61 , Salem
St. , Rutland, died Wednesday
evening at the Holzer Medical Center following a lingering illness. ~b~ur~y~.----.,.---~----~===M=ID:D:L:I:PO::RT::O:H:IO::==;~
Arrangements will be annoWJced by ,..
the Walker Funeral Home in
Rutland.

Emergency
squad runs

•Voi.29,No.

•

.e

•

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT

One hurt in accident

'

1981

Ohio

nutritionist aide; Frank Petrie, R.S., deputy health
commissioner; Kim Winebrenner, sanitarian In
training; Pearl Scott, clerk/registrar. Not present: Dr.
Sellm Blazewicz, health eommls~ioner; NIU Wlsnlskl,
R.N., hyptertenslon &lt;·ontrol program, ud Betty
Christopherson, senior volunteer. (See Story on Pagcl21

•

'I

The increase calls for a commodity charge of $2 per 1,000 cubic
feet of gas, up 45 cents from the
present rate of $1.55. This figure
does not include the PGA rate, better known as fuel adjustment clause.
However, coWJcil took no action on
lhe proposal.
Willie Guinther, councilman,
. reported he had contacted Frank W.
Porter, village solicitor, regardill(l
large trucks driving on village
streets.
Porter suggested Mayor Eber
Pickens, Chief of Police Milton
Varian and Sgt. James Sheets of the
Ohio Highway Patrol bring in scales
to weigh trucks that are believed to
be overweight.
Varian has found out the stale
patrol does not weigh trucks in
Meigs County. Council discussed
other avenues that might be taken to
stop the opera ton of large trucks on
village streets.
Guinther will again contact Porter
with the suggestions made by council. Council feels heavy trucks are
posing a prob)em in maintaining
village streets.
Gene Imboden, fire chief, informed council ' that an application
for a grant under the 1981 Rural
County Fire Protection program
through Ohio Deparbnent of Natural

Resources, has been denied.
- Imboden also rep()r!ed one of the
·pagers used for emergency and fire
calls has been lost and there was no
insurance.
Imboden suggested the pagers be
insured. A pager cost $295 each plus
the cost of a charge. Council ageed
to insure the pagers and secure cost
of insurance from local insurance
firms.
Council,

in

other

business,

·designated five parking spaces next
to the city building facing the ball
park for use by members Of the
emergency squd and fire department.
Council also discussed the issue Of
dogs running lOOse in the village and
asked residents to cooperate in
keeping dogs tied to owners property.
Persons, who know the owner Of a
dog running loose, are to contact the
Mayor, Chief Varian or any council
member.
Residents are aiso being asked to
cut trees that are hanging over
village streets. It was also disclosed
that sidewalks in need of repair is
the responsibility of property
lwners.

Meeting with council was Bill Ar·
(Continued on page 7)

GUEST INSTRUCTOR- Jack Delaney, director of lbe Jackson High
School Symphonic Band, works wttb lite Meigs High School Band which
will present a concert Sunday and is getting ready lor participating in the
District Ohlu Music Education AsowelaUon in GaUipolis on !\larch 13.
.l

--- - - --- - - - - - - ---- - - - - - - - - - - - - -

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