<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14512" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/14512?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-05T11:44:53+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="45619">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/2eea3fa2b633286a843c31785ce98c63.pdf</src>
      <authentication>7d5073fdbb8fbec056599e0b412550e4</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45298">
                  <text>Miners ready for Washington rally
by Dick Cava ll~

WINTHI?OP
HE~

~TEACH "iCUR
D::X5- TO TAP-

WINTHROP. ..

q!JE"55 WHAT

DANCE' lA"'.'I~

~RON 15~ .

II

"NATIONAL
CHICI&lt;EN FDr

PIE:'' DA'Y':!

NO.

EATA

~PPERONI

PIZ.7A Wlll-tA

NqNO.

J

FRIEND'' DA'Y~

CHARLESTON, W.Va . (AP) march through Washington to the
Carrying a coffin to symbolize White House, according to union ofcomrades who have died of black ficials.
lung, thousands of coal miners were
Administration officials called
heading to Washington today for a last month lor changes in the Black
rally to defend federal pensions for Lung Program, contending that penvictims of the disease.
sions were being handed out to
The United Mine Workers Union miners who did meet not medical
also called for a national coal miners requirements and that the fund
strike by its 160,000 members today faced bankruptcy. Black lung is a
and Tuesday to protest a Reagan ad- respiratory dise11se caused by
ministration plan to toughen · prolonged inhalation of coal dust.
eligibility requirements for black
In a scene that UMW officials said
lung pensions.
was being repeated in other states,
Up to 10.000 miners planned to about 400 miners boarded six buses

•
•
(

•

NO, NO,
NO/

"51.-IP GN "'THE
ICE .AND SREAJ&lt;

YOUR CLAVIQ...E "
DA'Y~

~

NO.' NO.'

Ne::vE=R
MIND/

tJNIV~L...

INGR:";WN
~NAIL

REiv\OVAL" CAA.'r'"?

''TAKE: A
CUO&lt;CO
CI..CGK
TOUJNCH"

ToDAY

DAYZ.

•

••• IN THEW
'

LD

Killer dies in electric chair
@ 1M1 by NEA. Inc,. TM Reg. U.S. Pat. &amp; TM Off.

'

by Ed Sullivan

Priscilla's Po
PCP, [;0 YOU THINK I COULD HA'rr::
AN ADVANCE Q.l MY ALLavANCE ?

~

BEING
A LITTLE NAIVE.
MR. NUTCHELL?

MICIDGAN CITY, Ind. - Joking with his guards and blaming himself for his late, 24-year-old Steven T. Judy went willingly to his death
in Indiana 's black oak electric chair early today for murdering a
mother and her three small children nearly two years ago.
Judy, who resisted appeals, saying he preferred death to life in
prison, became the fourth person executed in this country since the
U.S. Supreme Court revived the death penalty in 1976 . His was the fi"t
execution in 20 years in Indiana 's electric chair, made from wood that
once served as a ga llows.

Hijackers renew demands
DAMASCUS, Syria - The hijackers of a Pakistani airliner, after a
seve!Hiay standoff in Afghanistan, took t~ plane and 1110re than 100
hostages to Damascus during the night and renewed their demands for
relea~e of imprisoned foes of Pakistani President Mohammed Zia ulHaq.
In four hours of negotiations by radio with Pakistani diplomats and
Syrian security officers in the Damascus control tower, the hijackers
demanded freedom for other members of their anti-Zia group and an
end to government propaganda against their organization, airport
sources reported.
Freedom was demanded spec ifically for Nasser Gamal and the
family of Salamullah Khan, but no information about them was immediately available.

Cuts may have long range effect
COLUMBUS, Ohio - U.S. Sen. Howard Metzenbaum , D-Ohio, main,tains that plans by the Reagan administration to cut money for such
programs as child care and nutrition counseling will have a "longrange. negative elfect" on the women's rights movement.
" ERA (the Equal Rights Amendment ) Is dead," said Metze nhaum,
appearing Saturday to address the Ohio Federation of Busine~s and
Professional Women's Clubs.
Turning to the economy, he said he believes President Reagan 's
programs to combat inflation must begin to show some pos1t1vc effL&gt;ct
by July I.

IT'S cc:;..w..~ KNOWLEDGE THAT
THE LAST MONEY lrOU RECEIVED
WAS '?PENT LESS THAN AN ' HOUR
AFTER YOU RECEIVED IT.'

-1'The

administr11tion is not going
to propose anything that would
deprive any miner who is disabled
by black lung from qualifying for

Additional funds available
COLU MBUS, Ohio - The Department of Economic and Community
Development announced that about 4()()',000 Ohio households may
receive an additional $40 each this spring to help pay winter heating
bills.
The state's $90 million Home Energy Assistance Program is finan- ·
ced by federal windfall prorits taxes. Nearly $85 million of it will be
distributed to help the needy pay heating bills for the months of
December, January and February. The rest of the money is used to
administer the program.
Payments, of which $750 is the maximum, are based on severa l factors, including income,

IJOnefits," Donovan said in the letter.
Frank Thunnond, a UMW official,
said the Donovan letter was .
designed to '' take some of the steam
out of our protest."
Thurmond said the UMW planned
to hold a second rally on March 28 at
Harrisonburg, Pa., to protest the
Reagan administration's support of
nuclear power.
'
Monthly black lung benefits run
from $254 to $508 for a miner with.
three or more dependents, according to the Labor Department.

2 Sections, 12 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, March 9, 1981

Copvrighted 1981

WELL, 1 6!UE55 I ,.
WONT B~ qETTINq
A BIRT!-{DAY
PRE5ENTFR::M HIM.

from Cabin Creek, W.Va.
Labor Secretary Raymond
Donovan sent a letter to UMW
President Sam Church late last
week, saying the administration
does not intend to take black lung
benefits away from those who deserve them. Donovan said the 'administration only wants to make the
prol(ram support itself.

en tine

at

v'o1 •.2f,No. 226

II

UMW District 17, said "This will
mark the end of the honeymoon with
the Reagan administration."
The miners settled aboard the
buses and joked as they broke out six
packs and prepared for the eight
hour trip. Some retired miners
joined the mostly young men.
"I worked in the mines for 35
years, started when I was 16. I've
got black lung disease so bad I can
hardly breathe at times and yet it
still took me three years to get my
(black lung) award," said Dave
Cooper, a 7().year-old retired miner

•

e

•

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

in Charleston late Sunday night. Between 3,000 and 4,000 miners left in
other buses and by car from mining
towns throughout southern West
Virginia, UMW officials said.
" We already know of 7,000 who are
coming on buses,'' said a spokesman
at the UMW's Washington headquarters. "We originally thought 4,000 to
5,000 miners would march Monday,
but it now looks · like twice that
many, counting those who are
coming by plane and driving their
own cars."
Cecil Roberts, vice president of

Two hurt
in wrecks

15 Cents

A Mult,media Inc. Newspaper

Most weapons reportedly
dispatched to guerrilla
in pro vine ..

Two persons were injured in a twocar crash in Gallipolis Saturday afternoon, according to the GalliaMeigs Post of the Ohio Highway
Patrol.
The patrol said Carl Gorby, 60, Rt.
I ; Langsville, was making a left turn
from SR 7onto the ramp to the Silver
Bridge at 5:05p.m. when he collided
with a southbound auto driven by
Opal Nott, 42 , Rt. 2, Point Pleasant.
Damage to both vehicles was
heavy and both Gorby and a
passenger, Pauline Gorby, 60, Rt. 1,
Langsville, were both injured. They
were taken to Holzer Medical Center
by the Gallia EMS, where Pauline
Gorby was treated for neck trawna.
Carl Gorby was cited for failure to
yield right of way.
The patrol investiga ted a one-car
crash in Mei,gs County ea rly Sunday
night.
·
Harold Smith, 37, Reedsville , was
eastbound on SR 248 at 6 p.m. when
his car went of! the right side o( the
road and into a ditch. causing slight
danillge and no injury, Smith was
cited for OWl.
A one-car accident in Galli a County was investigated early Sunday
morning, according to the report.
Harold Barnes, 37. Rt. I, Bidwell,
was southbound on Bulaville-Porter
Road at3 a.m. when a deer ran into
the path of his car.
Barnes swerved to avoid collision
and went off the right side ol the
road and into a ditch, overturning.
Heavy dama ge was reported to the
auto and Barnes was not injured.

Arms reportedly shipped
by boat from Nicaragua
across Gull of Fonseca .
through Honduras and
into El Salvador by truck,
end by aircraft from
Managua and Costa Rica

Son S.lvador •

COMMuNIST ARMS SHIPMENT ROUTES This map of El Salvador locates routes which the
I

Urilted States Stale Department says the Soviet Union
and its allles are using to supply left guerriUas with
weapons.

More ·men, arms, money
enroute to El Salvador

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador declining lot."
A major offensive in mid-January
(AP) - More men, arms and money
Property tilx de&lt;~dline are on their way to El Salvador from resulted
in the brief seizure of a
a U.S. administration that voices provincial capital, San Francisco
.~et for 4 P.M. Tue.~d&lt;~y fears the (iny Central American Gotera, 65 miles east of the capitaL
nation could be the first to topple in a But a week later, President Jose
George C. ·Collins, Mei gs County
Napoleon Duarte declared the ofnew superpower ga me of dominoes.
Treasurer, announced today that
But there is little sign that leftist fensive over and said, "There is
real estate property tax and trailer
guerrillas will seize control, despite nothing more they can do with their
taxes must be paid by 4 p.m.
continued fighting beiween the in- anns.''
Tuesday, March 10.
. The guerrillas have conceded they
surgents and government forces.
Each tax ca rries " 10 percent
They have fail ed to ·capture any are regrouping.
penalty il not paid by 4 p.m.
Their calls for mass uprisings and
major chunk of territory , and lorTuesday, Collins said.
mer U.S. Ambassador Robert Whit• strikes have been largely inefsays they are a " b•·oken and fective. Their attacks now are

isolated actions tinged with the
same kind of terrorism that has been
attributed to El Salvador's far right.
A greater threat to the regime, according to some, may come from
rightists in the Salvadoran military,
which is well-armed and indisposed
·to tolerate a middle-of-the-road
government.
The Reagan administration is adding $2S million to the $10 million
worth of arms already shipped to El
Salvador's military, and 20 U.S.
military advisers are being assigned
to the force of 34 already here .

~ ·

Cop knew it would ruin career
TOLEDO, Ohio- As he rired two gunshots last Sept. 14 , Gary Dunn
blew away his eight-year police career.
He was charged with felonious assault and pleaded guilty to a lesser'
charge of attempted felonious assault. He was sentenced to I 'h to 10
years in prison. That sentence was suspended, but the judge ordered
him to serve 120 days in the county's work-release program.
The policeman made another mistake during those early morning
hours of Sept. 14: He failed to report the shooting incident to his

I. •
'-

..

_

..~

... .

superiors.

Labor leaders call urgent talks

"SO WE'VE GOT AVAPOR LOCK ...AND I SUPPOSE
YOU DIDN'HRING ·YOUR VAPOR LOCK KEY!"

"BUT THIS IS ADOLLAR I SQUIRRELED AWAY IN 19101
IT'S WORTH THREE OF TODAY'O DOI.LAFISI"

WARSAW, Poland - Poland's independent labor leaders called lor
urgent talks today with the country's premier to discuss alleged government harassment of union members, a crackdown on dissidents and
a threatened strike in Lodz that would shatter three weeks of labor
peace.
·
The leaders of Solidarity. Poland's !().million-member independent
labor federation, called for the dialogue in a conununiquc Issued after
a marathon meeting that broke up before dawn Sunday .

]-... \i~
'

.;II.
..
'

~.

Citizenship can be revoked
l'aouL."i Y ~00/'1
YAI&gt;IOU

U,

PARMA, Oliio - In contrast to his stoic demeanor at his
denaturalization trial, John Demjanjuk shed tears at a rally of ethnic
Ukrainians who believe he has heen falsely accused of aiding the Nazis
as a death camp guard in Poland during World War II .
Demjanjuk's U.S. citizenship, obtained in 1958, can be revoked if
U.S. District Judge Frank J. Battisti believt!s the .Justice Department's case against the 6().year-old autoworker from the Cleveland
suburb of Seven Hills.

•

Weather

"BUT I KNOW Wf.ll,Rj; •llli
IT JUST LOOKS LIKE

''THEY CEFITAH.YARE PUSHINO THIS 'STOP CAM'
BUSINESS/I JU8T CAME IN HERE TO SEE IF
THEY'D FOUND MY LOST WALLET!"

-· , / /
/

#

Mostly cloudy tonight. r:ows 25-30. Partly cloudy Tuesday. Highs in
the low to mid--lOs. Chance of precipitation 20 percent tonight and
Tuesday. Winds southwesterly 10 mph or less tonight.
EKieoded Ohio Forecast- .
Wednesday through Friday:
Fair weather Wednesday and Frlaay and a chance ol some rain or
snow mainly in the north on Thursday. Ncar normal temperatures
with daily hi~hsln the 40• and nighlllmt low• In thr mid-20s to low :ltls.

•'

, .•,.,.. . .··"..,.,..,#'

'

/'"'&gt;

~//
/

/

•••

,.....,..,.

/'

/

/'

.

/ ~/"' . .~

..../..

'·"" . ,.-"

/'/ / . /

/
.·

_,/

..
,..-"

/

DISTRICT BOUND - Tucsduy the Southern Tornadoes fare Portsmouth Clay in the District Tourney at Chilli&lt;'uthc High School al 7 p.m.
The eummunity has again giVl'u ~real support to the Southern •·agers as
111111 1~ si~ n!'l 11 !~\'f" nln•ndy drr~yptt•d ttw f'ommunity In support of thj• .

.

Southern team. Here the pareats of Southern's southpaw, Kent Wolfe,
have put up this dhlplay at their Rac!De home. Kent Is the son ol Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Wolle ol Racine. Larry was a former Racine High School allstater. Sec story Page 3.

�Mondav , March 9, 1981

_Commentary

Page-2- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Monday, March 9, ·1981

.
•
•

On right and
A casual line, thoughtlessly drop-

! ped in Newsweek in a report on
: stalled SALT negotiations gives us a
• clue to the principal moral responsibility of the Rea gan administration, which is persuasively
to reassert certain truths that
distinguish us from those we week to
; protect ourselves against. In citing
: the dangers of a nuclear buildup,
Newsweek correspondents conclude: " At best, the extra billions of
: dollars for defense would severely
· · drain both countries' economies. At
worst, the pell-mell, action-reaction
cycle would produce a tempora ry
advantage for one side that it might
be templed to exploit."
Both sides. Who began that stuff?
Probably the worst expression of it
was in a speech given at Yale by
Senator William Fulbright in the
'60s. George Kennan, when he gets
clinical, oversterilizes hi s
vocabulary, and before long you see
the Soviet Union as the A team and
the U. S. as the B team, all very simple.
Probably the worst of the lot, both
because he spoke always from an
august pedestal, and because he
spoke augustly, wsa Charles de
Gaulle. Above all because his
statements were taken to be informed by a distinctive historical
sweep, and guided by right reason.
he referred, on several occasions, to
"les deux hegemonies. " " The two

hegemonies." He would have been
altogether dumbfounded if Winston
Churchill had referred to the Vichy
government, dominated by the
Nazis, and the exiled government,

wroneig~--~---.:..._:_:_---,-___

dominated by de Gaulle, as '"France's two conlending governments."
The nadir in our period of self·
abuse came during the Vietnam
War, when such as Noam Chomsky
or.MIT, and others mostly forgotten
but whose moral reasoning continues its extraordinary resonance
in the academies and in the press,
denounced America. It became
altogether routine to make comparisons between Americans and
North Vietnamese, to the disad·
vantage of Americans. For Soviet
propaga ndists to construe the
United States as the aggressor
nation is rouiine stuff.
It ought to be routine stuff for
• Americans to accept lackadaisically
the most significant trillmph of the
Conununist-aggressor movement,
which is to persuade so many that
there are, as between the Soviet

Union and the United States. merely
historical-cultural differences. The
difference between us isn't that we
are saints, and they are sinners. It is
that we seek to be saints, and they
seek to be sinners. Sainthood here
defined is the acceptance of the individual human being as a man born
to be free; sin here defined is the dedivinization of man in pursuit of
secular ideology.
Wh at's the mat te r with
Newsweek' For 20 yea rs the United
States had conclusive military and
nuclear superiority. I don't know a
single public figure who proposed
that we should use it to dispose preemptively of the creeping Soviet
menace. At the end of 1945 we occupied Germany, Japan, Italy and a

The Daily Sentinel
IIICuurtStr~t

Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2 156
DE\'OTE:n TO THF: INTE REST OF THE MF. If:S-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
publjshrr

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

A~sistant Publi~her/Controllrr

DALE ROTHGEB. JR.
A MEMBE R of The AssUt' i.ll lt&gt;d Press, Inland Daih• Prt'SS ASStlt' ia litlD li nd lilt'
A.meriran N,...,.·~ papt'r Publish~r~ A~~m·iatiun .

LETTERS ~F OPJNI~fl.' arr ""(•\romt"d . T~t' Y shou.ld be less than lOO words long. All
letltrs are ! Ub)ect lu f'dltlng. and mus~ bt- stgued "1lh n.a tnr, atMr~ss and trlephmlt'
number. No unsiJ:Ied leu ers wtil be published. Lclll'rs shllu\d be in gl)od lastt, addres sing
Issues, n11t ~rS OllJ~Iitlcs .

dooen peripheral countries. We
could, had we been so disposed, have
colonized Great Britain and France.
Instead we got out of all those countries, gave the Philippines their independence a nd , after a
generation's entreaty~ agreed to annex Hawaii and Alaska as sovereign
states.
Newsweek secured an interview
with Rubin Zamora, who is
eme rgin g as the principal
spokesman for the revolutionaries in
El Salvador. Question: " Why did the
American gov£rnment release its
so-ca lled wluTe paper claiming
(note: " claiming," not 11 demonstmting" ) outside meddling in El
Salvador?"
Answer: "'The United States is up
to its neck in support for a genocidal
goverrunent ... It's so similar to
what the United States wa~ saying
just before its 1965 intervention in
the Dominican republic. My personalfeeling is great sorrow."
My personal teeling is Ulat talking
with Mr. Zamora other than behind
bars is a waste of time. Find me a
member of the Reagan ad·
ministration interested in genocide.
Why did the overwhelming majority
of the Organization of American
States support President Johnson's
intervention in the Dominican
Republic? How long did U. S. troops
stay there? Who backed democratic
practices there during the last election ?
Newsweek's reporters reveal that
"according. to intelligence sources.

~ ..._

The ball omgo
t"
f th e 1as1eec
1 t'tontssl
· t'll avJvJ
· 'd memory, but· speculat10n
.
has already begun on the possible ca ndidates for the 1982 Ohio governor's
race.
The ·lnt·1·1a_11·IS1 of poss1·ble can d"1dales to replace Gov . James A. Rhodes
doesn't appear to contain many new names.
Cleveland Mayor George V. Vomovich and State Sen. Thomas A. Van
Meter of Ashland are the most frequently mentioned Republican
hopefuls.
Former Peace Director· Richard F. Celeste, who was defeated by
Rhodes in the 1978 gubernatorial campaign, and Ohio Attorney General
William Brown currently have the inside track with speculators for the
.. Democratic nod.
Asurvey of BOO voters taken on behalf of the Republican National Committee in mid-Janu~ry tapped Voinovich as the only GOP contender who
could defeat Celese in the race .
,
The survey, conducted by Market Opinion Research Corp. of Detroit,
shows Voinovich with a lead of about &amp;percent in a potential face-off bet·
ween the two Cl-Janders.
Voinovich, however, has previously denied he is interested in becoming
a candidate in next year's GOP primary election.
Celeste, on th~ other hand , has already announced his intention to run
for the state's top post:
The Republican survey showed Democrat Celeste did substantially better against otherGOP candidates, such as Van Meter and U.S. Rep.
ClarenceJ. Brown.
Franklin County Republican Chairman Michael F. Colley named 10
potential candidates for the governor's office during a television interview program Sunday.
According to Colley, Franklin County Treasurer Dana G. Rinehart
"certainly has to be ranked as a potential statewide candidate and it
could be for any office from the, top of the ticket to the bottom."
Rinehart has already expressed a desire to run for statewide office in
1982, but has't disclosed which office he has his sights on.
Colley also named Republican Columbus Mayor Tom Moody and Ohio
Department of Natural Resources Director Robert Teater as potential
candidates for the governor's chair.
Democratic Howard M. Metzenbaurn topped Gov. Rhodes in the poll in
a poilsible race between the two lor Metzenbaum's U.S. Senate sea t. Metzenbaum had a 21 percentlead over the governor.
The survey also showed that 65 percent of those questioned believes
Rhodes should retire from politics. Some have suggested that Rhodes
play the role of statesman in 1982 to help promote the GOP ticket.
Metzenbaum also ran about 30 percent ahead of U.S. Rep. John Ashbrook of Johnstown in such a race. Ashbrook said he plans to enter the
GOP primary in hopes of winning a crack at Metzenbaum.

Today in history.

• •

part, and posies spring up m the
most, of the rebels are between 15
pavement.• of San Salvador 1f ?nly
'and 18 years old, and their youth
the
junta.redistributed the land, IS as
consistently betrays them in actual
naive
as that we are intervemng an
combat. " Their youth consistently
El
Salvador
because we like to supbetrays their awful manipulability
port
people
engaged
in killing. other
by such as Zamora. The government .
people.
Reagan
is
right
: The disllnc·
of El Salvador is a mess. It has gone
lion
between
the
Duartes
Ill thiS
through 30 upheavals sinc"e 1932.
world
and
the
Zamoras
of
tl1is
world
The notion that the clouds would

is a distinction within which we need
to maneuver.
But Jet us be morally assertive. It
is not chauvinistic to announce that
the United States will not tolerate
·another Soviet-dominated abscess in
the Western hemisphere, and if
people don't understand why, then
they are moral1diot..

Census _shows jump in housing units
WASHjNGTON (AP) - Although
Ohio's population barely edged upward during the 1970s, Census
BUreau figures show a surprising
jump in the number of housing units
in the state.
Preliminary totals for the 1980
census report the number of housing
units in the state at 4,093,642, compared with 3,466,688 in 1970 - an 18.3
percent increase.
Preliminary census figures fix the
tpta l state population as of April I,
1980, at 10.772,342, a 1.1 percent increase over the 10,657,423 reported
in 1970. Final figures are llfll expected to vary significantly from the
preliminary report.
'
Rep. Ralph S. Regula, R-Ohio, of
Navarre says the apparently conflicting data on housing units may
ren~ct the state's aging population.
Rep. Clarence J . Brown, R-Ohio,
suggested that it represented ··a
· sharp decline in the nwnber of
people to a family .'"
"When all the (census) details
come out, you may find a large nomher of young marrieds and young
singles without children and anumher of elderly who are living one or
two
ba to a house ' "' sa id Brown, of Ur-

Candidates for
g overnor emerm ng
•

_m_u_lia_m_F_. B_u~ck_ler_Jr.

~a. 1 0 sugge ted that the 10 er
eas
. s
. w_

number of resrdents per housmg umt

indicated " a certain prosperity over
the decade."
Rep. Lyle. Williams, R-Ohio, of
Warren, said the new census infonnatlon may have an impact on
Department of Housing and Urban
Development programs .
- He said HUD had pulled some
community developmeot funds out
of his district "because they were
not meeting the requirement for lowincome housing.''
The new figures-may show that the
info,nnation on which HUD based its
policies was wrong, Williams said.
The 1980 census figures for Ohio's
metropolitan areas generally reflect
a continuing population shift from
cities to suburbs during the 1970s.
The report shows 16 cities lost
population during the decade and
only two gained.
Outside of Ohio's cities it was a different story. Fourteen of the state's
15 metropolitan areas showed
population growth in the suburban
areas.

A metropolitan area includes the
city proper and surrounding subur·
bs.
In Cleveland, whic~ lost the most
within city boundaries, the nw11ber
of residents in just the suburbs of the
four counties considered part o[ the
metopolitan area increased slightly

from 1,312,850 in 19iil to 1.322.134 in
the 1980 census.
However, Cleveland metropolil&lt;in
area population dropped fl"Olll
2,003;129 to 1,895,391 over the decade.
reflecting losses in the In ner city.
The population decline within
Cleveland came to 23.7 percent from 750,879 to 512.657.
Cincinnati , · the second larg e~1
metropolitan area in the slcite, mai n,tained an edge over Colwnbus even
though population totals sli pped
!rom 1,100,821 to 1,091.363.
Colwnbus. a rare area where both
city and suburban populations 1-(rcw ,
saw the central ci ty' increase from
540.025 in !970 to 56Uu2 1n 1980 and
the metropolitan area grow from
1,017 ,847 to 1,088,067 .
Cincinnati is the state's thi rd
largest city with a 1980 populat ion of
383,114, down 15.5 per cent from the
1970 population of 453,514.
While most cities dcclLned, overall
populatiOn totals increased in eig ht
of the state's 15 metropolitan areas.
Some Ohio cities ha ve challenged
census figures, particula rly in inner
cit y a r eas. claimin g lh a t
enwnerators missed large numbers
of people. Census officials say that
while the fi gures are preliminary ,
the final report is not expected to
change significantly .

While populatior declines were
widespread, the number of housing
units
increased in eve ry
metropolitan area and · in all but
th ree central cities.
Even in the city of Cleveland,
where population decl ined and
housing units dropped from 264,090
in 1970 to 239,208 111 1980, the number
of housin~ units in the metropolitan
area increi.ISed.
The Census Bureau found 733,348
housing un.t.s In the Clevelar).d area
in 1980 compared to676,904 in 1970.
Housing unit declines also were
recorded in Cinci nnati i172,768 in
1970; 172,294 . in 1980 ) and
Youngstown l46.875 in 1970; 4~. 093 in
19801.
DISTRicr COURTS
The basis of the U. S. judicial
system is the District Court. There
are 94 of these federal courts, at
least one in each state", the District
of Columbia and certain territories.
Cal led cou rts of general jurisdiction,
they have the power to pass
judgment in criminal cases in·
volving viola tions of federal law. in
civil cases when the contending partics reside in different states, and in
other types of cases such as
bankrupt c y, patents , lr •
ilcmarks, copyrights, and matters
involving navigational waters.

Business ills: whose fault?___ _R_ob_ert_w._a_lte_rs
WASHINGTON (NEA l- Leaders
of the business conununity - not
government bureaucrats, slothful
workers or othe r convenient
scapegoats - must accept much of
the responsibility fo" this country' s
drastic productivity declines in
recent years .
That heretical viewpoint was advanced at the recent mid-winter
meeting here of the National Governors' Associaton in a pair of littlenoticed speeches delivered by senior
executives of two of the nation's
most progressive companies.
"For too long now, we've been
making big governnient the big excuse for our business failures," said
David L. Kearns, pesident and chief
operating officer of the Xerox Corp.
" American businessmen are hiding
behind government regulations."
Some of the complaints about
federal rules and restrictions undoubtedly are valid, added Kearns,
" but ... I don't think we should keep
using them to get ourselves off the
hook. "
William C. Norris, board chair·
man of the Gontrol Data Corp., com-

plained that the business com- ·
munity's current call for " reindustrializing America" was little
more than "a catchy phrase for
beefing up the status quo."
"All of the (reindustrializationl
proposals I've seen are essentially a
rehash of assorted actions such as
cutting taxes, changing depreciation
schedules and reducing government
regulations," said Norris.
"These and similar actions have a
role, but overall they don't address
the root causes of our
deterioration," he added. " We have
drifted into a regressive culture and
we must break out of it."
Norris offered this highly critical
view of a "timid and reactionary"
business community :
''Except for those hardy souls who
start up and operate small
businesses and a lew large,
progressive companies, there is a
lack of new product and service innovations that yield increases in
productivity, permit a higher standard of living, subdue inflation and
create new jobs ... Many big cor. porations, with their vast resources

and well-established markcl,. arc
for the must part avoidi ng risks and
are primarily increasing profi ts by
emphasiz in g improvements in
existing products." ·
K ea rns' &lt;:~nalysis wets ev~ n hi:lr·
sher: " The United States is strewn
with se:~ d evidence of managerial
failur e. Whol e industr ies
automobiles, steel, conswncr electronics and others - have fallen viclim tJ) more aggressive, more efficient and bctlcr managed overseas
competitors ...
" American bu::;incssmen · have
grown up with a short~s i ghtt.'(t
. menl&lt;llity tied to the quarterly earnings
report instead of the future . Risk the very corners tone of our
capitalistic system - has become
too risky ...
" The almost wholesale refusal of
American business to invest in il'i
own future has depressed productivity growth, raised our operating
costs and pushed inflation higher ...
Every single business in trouble in
this country has been devoid of sur·
prises for years ...
" American goods no longer meet

W.4&gt;' GIN'I

the test of quality in the world
market - and the future belongs to
those who sell to the world. We now
sec fore ign manufacturers moving
into our country in precisely the w• y
we use d to move into underdeveloped countries."
Similar conclusions were presen·
ted to the nation's governors in a
detailed conference working paper
that argued that " present Ameri can
management styles are at least as
much a part of the problem of the
United States' competitive decline
as other more traditional factors."
That analysis deplored the fa ct
that "a major share of personal in·
come for top managers is deP'!ndent
Dn the previous year's earnings and
curren t stock prices, increasing the
tendency to focus on today's per·
lonnance at the cost of tomorrow 's
producL' and markets."
Solutions are available lor most of
those problems, but they require
corporat e managers to de·
emphasize their search lor
scapegoa ts and lor security in favor
of bold initiatives to reestablish their
primacy in world markets.

DOONESBURY

Pomeroy

Southern's second season continues
with dzstrict game at Chillicothe
BY SCOTI WOLFE
Nichols exchange roles as sixth men
RACINE - The regular season after starting ea rlier in the season.
has concluded, but the "second The two platooned the starting berth
season" continues at Chillicothe now tied down by the sophomore
High School Tuesdat evenln~ . when Conley: ·
the local Racine-Southern TorBench-wise Nichols and Entler act
nadoes meet the Portsmouth Clay as seven starters and carry the
Panthers at 7 p.m. in first round ac- · majority of the bench's work load.
lion of the Class A District TourBasically Clay is a zone defense
nament. Southern is 19-3 on the team, sticking mostly to its effective
season, while Portsmouth Clay owns 1-2-2 zone. The Panthers also display
a if&gt;-7 mark.
a good zone press and )!alf court
If regular season play and past pressure zone.
periormances give any indi cations
Scouting reports reveal Clay's
as to what kind of game this one will crew is a patient team, which works
be, area fans are in for an exciting for the good stiot. The Panthers run
game. Both clubs are under the a very deliberate offense and
guidance of two veteran coaches in through constant rotation have
Southern's Carl Wolfe and Coach Ar- developed a good inside-outside
ch Justice of Portsmouth Clay. shooting team. According to Coach
Coach Justice is in his 21st year as a Wolfe, Clay is a very well coached
head mentor.
ball club.
Two years ago, Southern defeated
Both clubs had just one common
Clay in district play at Chillicothe in opponent during the regular season.
overtime, leading to a dramatic vic- Clay went down to defeat, early in
tory over Ross Southeastern that the season to Ross Southeastern on
gave Southern a berth in the the Richmondale hardwood .
Regiona l Tourney. One player !rom Southern edged Southeastern by one
that team, Greg Craft who was a point at Racine a month ago.
sophomore at that time, ha s
For Southern, the past speaks lor
developed into one of Clay's team itself. Over the years the Southern
leaders at his forward position. Six- Tornadoes have been a proven winfoot-one senior Craft and guard ner, clinching five consecutive secBrian Ri chard ended the season as tional championships and 'five
the Panthers' leading scorers with straight SVAC crowns.
solid 14 and 13 point averages .'
On the court, senior Southern stanProbable sta rters for the Por- dout Dale Teaford will test his
tsmouth quintet will be 6-1 Brian shooting skills against the Clay zone.
Richard at guard. Richard is a good Teaford tallied 374 points during the
ballhandler and integral part of the regular season and carried an 18.7
Clay offensive attack. At the other point scoring average, while
guard is :;.9' Brian Conley, who averaging 25 points per game thus
moved into a starting role la te in the far in the tournament trail.
season, after starring on the reserve
During sectional competition, the
squad most of the regular season.
6-2 Teaford led the Tornadoes in
At cente r is 6-S Jeff Flaugher, one rebounds, often leaping high above
of Clay's stronghold 's under the the rim to grab the carom. Talented
basket. At Iorwards are team leader ballhandler, playrnaker, and sharpand sharp-s hooter Greg Craft and 6- shooting southpaw Kent Wolfe con2 J im Gable. Tom Entler and Rick

•

linuously boosted his scoring
average throughout the season.
WoUe ended the year with 350 points
and a 17.5 scoring average, while
averaging 17 points per outing in
tournament play.
Senior defensi ve standouts
Dwayne Curfman and Terry NcNickle have perfonned well all
season long, and of late, have
focused their keen shooting eyes.
Big Robert Brown rounds out
Southern's starting five. Brown has
been dominating the boards for the
Tornadoes all season.
Southern's
superior
also isasa
plus
for the
localbench
cagers
Southern's third leading scorer and

Ohio ti.S. Boya Raske.tbal\
Salurday's Rt=1ullli
CII!UI A.V, Toumamu111
Akrvn G!i l"fit.!ld 72 , Mwssll lon JH~·kson &lt;65
C&lt;i mbnd ~ t' t 7. Winter9villc 12
l'lll Westl!rn Hil\s ~ . Cin . Turpin «&lt;

1.'111. Wtlhrow n, Cin. Elder 40

Ctll Ct•ntral 76. C1Jl. We:~thm (l ~
Col. Nurthlund 44 , Groveport U
Fmdlllv 53. Cdilm 42
(;uhun· 62. l .c xm~lon fil
M11 ns. Mnlabur 75, Mans. Senior 7J, OT
Mayfidd 63 , Eudi •l ~2
Ho.s:ifurd ti2. Swanton -4!i
Sn!on 6-ol, C\eYe, Ke~med y -19

Stl.'ul.wnvll\e 76. E. IJ\•ellJI"•\ SO
To\. OcV 1 1tm~s SO. Perrysburg :il
T\11 Mstcumbc!r 79 , To\. Centrnl Cilth. !"19
Tnl. llogcrs 7!"1 . Tnt · &amp;ott S.
To\. W~tlle ti2 . Tot Wh1lmc.r :ill
W~tWwurth !"12, Revert' :iO
Wstpnkutleta 68. MuritJII }bml in~ ~
(' \ass AA Tuurnamca\8
nrw klyrl 76, Ml'&lt;lhut Hi~ro:hland ~I
Uu ~· k e rc S. 79, Mar tu ~ F't&gt;rry 72, OT
Cmud Fu\\1)11 NW li(], Triwa}' 5!!
Curh sl ~ 6.1, Ds1yhm Ctuun-Jul tiO
Csurollton 59, Turonto 50
Chnncl 76. P1unesvillc Har.'e)' SJ
n n. Cret! nhi\ls 62, Goshen 49
Cin. ~h·Nic h olas 74, (.1cn nonl NE 52
D1x ic "i 7. Ham!ltcm ll41di n :f'J
El) rw W. M , Fire\ands 76
Fsm \cs.s ti6 . Akmn ltabltn &amp;4
lluron 73, Sl.ul dusk y St. Mar y 62
lrm1tcm 70. Minford ~
K;tflSH!i I ~tk.ll l.i! 6!1, F[to(turm fit
Kenton R1d)(e 02. Urbuna. 52
N111)01t~ n &amp;6, Bryan ~
Otlltwll Ohmdurf lift, !.h1U1 C11 th . rrt . ar
HooL~t own 51. W;tlt•r\00 5CI
I111S.'ifOrd :i:!: , Sw/111tllll 4!i
Stn itht•rs 7l, S. HliOII:l' :17
Tn · Va\lcy 66 , Tl.llll'li"Uwa s VaL 56
W:lrn•n I.Oca l 5:1, Alu:onde r ol6
Wnrnms\·ilh• R2. Au ror11 ::.0
Wll hud 67, Clem' l'ork 43
Cla!UI ~ Toumamt'lllA
1\da 00 , Spc11eervil\t• 49
ArchOO\d 48. Hill ltop 47
Arhnt:ton RJ , MC'Cotnb 61 , OT
C Hrdin~tun IW, Can.. l Wi nc h~t er $5
Cui. Summit 72. Will rarnsburlt( $7
Cu\ . Acmlt' lll}' 6.1 , J o!l!ls\ttwn Nurthrldi!t'
:13
('u v ln~ t un &amp;4 , Wayllrsvil!r 38
Hn\te.ntr 60, Aycrsvillt! ~7
.llldtstm C' enl1•r 7:r, I)I.•Grnff H lv er~i ch •

..

K&lt;tl lda !"12,
\.~tumm

PandorJI-Gt l~ ~&lt;&amp;

:17

Cath . ~7. Fnrt I ~tnunl e 45

M.nrltm Lt" •nl M. Sl. llcnry 48
Midd\l'li.IW\1 F~nwil'\~; 7~. New Mi11111 i
Ni•wruk CaU1. B9, Mlllerspur1 5A
N llni llll ~ . Wurthillt:ton Chmtl. 4J
OtltJ\'1\Ie :i7, Pa rkway 45
.~t . Wcruk!hn 70 F.l mwtMM.I 62
Tn .Vi l\:tlo(t' S:l, (:ret•nt~ v l cw :i:.!

~

The Duil y Sentinel
IUSPS IU-110)
A Ol .. lt lun of Mulllmedla, la t.

l'ui.Jhshed ever)· afternoon except Sunday,
Mondoiy through t'riW!y, 11 1Cou rt Stree t, by
the Ohio Valley Pu b li:t~ hl n!J Company •
Mu ltunedla, Inc.. rumero)', Oh.lo 4:1 7891
!t!tl-2 156. Sccund dm!.!l po!! UI"t! pa\d at
J•mnc ro}', Ol1iu.
Member ; The Asli~ hlh.'&lt;l Presli, lnbtnd Oai·

too American
Nt•wspM.per JlubliHhcr s Association, N11tionll \
AtlvcrliSilllot U c p r~lien tH tivt!, l ,an dinM
AS.\II~Ille!4 , 310\ •: udid Ave., CleVeland,

\y P res.'i AssocU!Iiun and

Ohiu . 4~1\~ .
r'&gt;(JSTMASn~ n :

~·nllncl.

St&gt;ml 1tcldress to The Daily
Il l CoLJriS\. , Pomt!NJY , 0hl04~769.

$1.00
011c Month
. .. . . ........... $4.40
One Vcur ......................... $52.80
SINGI. ECOPV
I'll ICE~~
llllily .. ' .. . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . • . • I ~Cenl.!l
..

M ~ ns .

N ~w

,

OMI AA Tour'nlmtnll

Cantun C11th. 116, Do)' le!! luwn S7
Cluyrno nt iO , St. Clair.~vil!e 62
Co\dwatl!r 48 , l.lrnH CtmtrHI Cath , 45
Cu\ llurt\cy 75, Westfall )'I
Gallipolis 5-t, Waverly U
Gree ne\'lew 43, S prln~boro i l
New IA" d ngtcn 43, Ironton 39
P l r.a~ n t H . nivt'r Vsd . i:i, JOT
R1 ver View .S , Glenn 2)
'
fla111 A Toura~~mf'nll
Adu 59, New Knoxville 46
Anna 6:!:, ltuss iu 47
B rld~o~cllllrl 6..1. &lt;1ttrt~way 411

. ···· ···.

• I

111.00

120.00
138.00

~

\'\'hen you find yourself with a
money problem, you naturally tum
to people you know and trust for a
solution. And in Ohio, that means
City Loan and Savings.
We've been helping people
since 191 2 With money to fix up a
room. Or take care of hills. Or for
unexpected expenses.
It all comes down to trust.
It's what we've built our
business 011. And when you come
talk to us about a loan, you'll see it for yourself.
Nobody knows you and your needs like we do.

76

,,
:~

~----::::-::--:-:1

CITY LOAN

&amp;SAVINGS
EST J91Z
12~

E. Main St . •992·2171

' ), T &gt;U

*

"T . ..

f'

Do · ou own or o,Jerale a
small or medium -size
retail store, office, apart ·
men! _,r church?
Then - vou may qualify
for Slate Auto Mutual's
SERIES ONE Business
Policy
a modern -astomorrow package plan
that combines an array of
broad property and liabili·
ty coverages required to
safeguard your opera·
lions. All for a Vef"V altrac·
live, affordable premium .
Let us explain the
super io r
features
of
SERIES ONE ... the short
lime we spend together
could prov e interesting
and rewarding to you .
Just give
a ca 11 or
mail the handy coupon .
DALE C. WARNER
INSURANCE
101 w. M~ln 991 ·2143 Pomeroy, 0 .

BefOre ypu start the dav.

. ·save some energy.
saving energy Is easy. Even In the morning .
All you need to know Is what It takes and follow
through.
Here·s a list of little things you can do that
won't cost a cent.
so start putting them Into pra ctice .
You'll be surprised now mucn energy
you 'll save.
surprised, too, that your lifestyle won·t
change.

Momlng 1nergy save"

STATE
AUTOMOBILE
MUTUAL
INSURANCE
COMPANY

in ltdYHnt•e (1\rect to The Dai ly
Sentinel on a J, 6 ur 12 rtlillllh hllsl.'l. Credit
wil \ be l!li1it!!l carrier e~tc h month .

$10 . ~

236 W. 2nd, Pomeroy, Oh.
(Formerly Meigs Gen. Hospita ll

Insurance Package
For You·

tnlt )' n~m\ 1

$1 7.50
$33.00

Steven L. Story and Karen H. Story

City

Bucke)'l! Trail 56, Zll nes . Rosecrans 51
Dt!iphll'l St. John 47. KaliW. 43
Mapletou H , Lordstown 30
Middletown Ft'!nwick &amp;9, AnsuniB 54
N. Baltimore t 7, Vanlue J9
Oil k HIU .50, BeHver Eas tern ~7
Purls . CIHy n' Huntington 52

,,alalwar 64, Shelby 42
Philadelphl11 &amp;0, l.o~~nc a .\ltr 48. OT

Sub.'itTIIJcni nut tlcsirinw to pay the carrl~r

MAll. SUR.._~ RIP't'IONS
Ohlu and Welt VlrJ!Jtla
:IMtmth . , ........... . ...... ...
Six milnlh
............
1 Vc1tr . . . . . . . · ... . ... · · · · .. ..
Ratts ouulde Ohio
ud Wtsl Vlr11iabl
J M11nt11 .
'
6 Mo11th
'.
\Yea r ..

AnORNEYS AT LAw

.

us

SU fl~C RIPTION RATES
8)' t.:arrir.r or Mo1ur Roul4!

{)111.' Wt!l!k .,

u

STORY &amp; STORY

1Loans

M ldwe~ ltm City
O~io

THE OFFICES OF

.

TOURNAMENTS

Chlmplouhlp
CMtlllhUillll Cit)' 8:!:, X11vi~r ,

THE OPENING OF

NOb0 dy kn0
more

Mid Eutrrn Alhltdc Ct~nferenre
CUmpiCJUh\p
Howard 66, N. Carolina A&amp;T 63

Bar~ rton 47. Wooster 43, OT
Cm. Ottk Hills 58, Ci n. Colerain 56
Co\. Nurth!Ji nd 711, NewKrk 60
Co\ , Watterson ~ 1 , Uppt!r Arlington :19
Cuyu h!Jftin FH\ls 61, Akron Buchtel 52
!Aty. P~tllersou 44 , Ctmterville 27
F:. Clt velnnd Shaw 47, Cl~ve . Glenville

ANNOUNCING

r~P:·m~.~s:ta~rt~i~n~g~tim~e~.======~~~O~f~f~ic~e~P~h~-~9~92~·~6~62~4~~~~====~H~o~m~e~P~h~-~9~92~-~3~5~2~3~

Su.OO.y's Colle11e Bullelh.ll Sc.·e~rt":li
MIDWEST
DePaul · 74, Notre Dtune 64

Oh\oH.S. Glrb B.a•kehll
S.&amp;urdly'IIWJu.Ua
ClllU AAA TounYIIIU!IIll

-------------- 1

Please tell me
I SERIES
ONE' u
I
"
I
~
·
I
I
I Alllll'l ,
I r:iii~jrI
~----

...~bout tho

Jmess Policy .

-~

·---·· ..-

l
I
I
I
I

.•
I

J

Page-3

classifieds pay dividends

low scoring game. In the tournament everyone tends to get conservalive.· Right now, though, our
kids are much more relaxed and
have had a good week of practice.
"One thing that always is in our
favor is the fan support. We expect
have a gO\)(! following," Coach Wolfe
stated. Five hundred tickets were
sold out early Thursday morning,
although tickets will be sold at. the
game for any others wishing to see
the game. Class A games wer e formerly slated for a 7:30p.m. starting
time, but have been changed to a 7

sometimes starter Richard Wolfe is
available along with Jay Rees. Also
making up Southern's ·bench
strength are Tom Roseb!orry, Paul
Cardone, Allen Pape, and Joe Bob
Hemsley.
Southern will stick to its man-t&lt;&gt;man defense, adjusting to a zone if
necessary. According to Coach
Wolfe, Southern has the edge of
quickness, while Portsmouth has the
edge is rebounding. Shooting-wise
and defensively both clubs are fairly
even.
Coach Wolfe sald, "I think the key
to this game, and any game this far
along, has to be dealing with
pressure. A lot of pressu~e is on the
kids at this point. We (Southern)
finished out a tough year with
Eastern, then came back in the tour·
nament to face them again. 1 don't
think you can put any more pressure
on kids than this ."
Southern overcame the tremendous pressure at Eastern, and as
Coach Wolfe added, '' We've been to
the district four times before," so
possibly the Tornadoes may have an
underlying edge in this category .
Coach Wolfe continued, " I feel thi s
gaD)e will be a control game and a

Tournament scores

No s ubsc riptio n~ by ma ll J)l!nniltr-d in tnwnl4
whore hunw ,·arrltr st!rvkt \savai\11blc.

Today is Monday, March 9, the 68th day of 1981. There are 297 days left
in the year.
Today 's highlight in history :
On March 9, 1661, the personal rule of King Louis XIV began when
French Cardinal Mazarin died.
On !his date :
In 1715, Portugal ratifierl the Peace of Utrecht, endiug its war with
Spain.

The Daily Sentinel

Middleport, Ohio

Starting tomorrow , take short showers.
When shaving don 't run hot water co ntin uously. Fill the sink halfway Instead.
If you use an electric razor you actually save
energy, using less of lt In a year than a hand razor
and not water uses In a week. ·
Whenever possible, use a toaster, toasteroven or a frv pan in place of the large oven or
range surface units.

Never use the oven as a heater.
Place a pan on the surface unit before turnIng the heat on . Heating air Is wasteful.
Match pans to the size of the heating surfaces on your range. .
If bolling eggs, use a minimum of water. It
shortens cooking time .
Save breakfast dishes until evening or a
time when aiJ dishes can be washed together.
If frying bacon and eggs, surface units can
be turned off a short time before food Is done.
Let the retained heat finish the cooking .
In winter, open the draperies so sunlight
will warm your home . Turn the thermostat down .
Turn off all unneeded lights, radio, TV, etc.
when leaving the hOuse or no one Is using them.
one final tip .
. For dozens of additiOnal ideas, call or visit
our office and ask for our free series of SAVE '
booklets.
·saye ~m er\ ca'S Valuable lnergv

we give It our best.

OHIO POWER COMPANY

�Page-6- The Daily Sentinel

Monday, Marcl!9, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

DePaul ready for tourney after big win
pionship game of the Pacillc Coast 15 to le~d Louisville over Cincinnati automatically. The NCAA opted for game. The Utes had finished in a tie beat Columpia 76-61 and the Tigers
Athletic Association tournament.
42-31 in the Metro Conference playof- Boston· College, the re~ular season with No. 19 Wyoming for the league downed Cornell52-46.
Idaho won its first Big Sky title fs. Creighton won the Missouri champion, and .Villanova instead of title.
with a 70-&amp;1 victory over Montana as Valley Coilference by beating Syracuse on a basis of records and
Elsewhere, No. 13 UCLA beat.
Brian Kellerman scored 21 points Wichita State 7!Hl4 behind Kevin the Orangemen instead were lieaded Washington 91-72 and Wyoming stopLEGAL NOTICE
and Ken Owens put in six in the final · McKenna's 23 points.
for the National Invitation Tour- ped Nevada-Las Vegas 97-70.
The Public Utilities Com_
Indiana won the Big Ten cham- nament.
namt!nt.
I: 16. The Vandals withstood a
Two league titles will be decided in
miss ion of Ohio has set for
11
"I'm not saying we'll win it, says furious Montana comeback to win pionship on the last day of the
Along with top-ranked Oregon playoffs this week because of ties.
public hearing Case No .
DePaul Coach Ray Meyer, " but their 25th game in 28 starts this year. regular season, beating Michigan State, No. 7 Utah also was upset Pepperdine meets San Francisco
81 -03-EL-EFC, to review
Northeastern won the ECAC North State 69-48. The 14th-ranked Saturday. The Utes were upended by tonight for the WCAC championship
we're capable. On any given night,
the fu e l procurement pracchampionsip with an upset 81 -79 Hoosiers clauned the title with the 18th-ranked Brigham Young 9:&gt;-7"S in after Saturday night's results which
we can play with anyone.''
tices
and policies of
On Sunday, they played well overtime victory over Holy Cross as
help of eighti&gt;-ranked Iowa's 78-70 the Western Athletic Conference. saw the Waves beat Loyola of Los
Columbu s and Sol,ltherf)
enough to beat a fine Notre Dame Terry Moss heaved in a desperation loss to Ohio State earlier in the day.
However, both teams will be going to Angeles 92-86 and the Dons whip Sk
Ohio Electr ic Company,
team, 74-64, and end the regular halfcourt shot at the buzzer. Steve
Leo Rautins broke a personal 24- the NCAAs - Oregon State as the Mary's 94-80. Penn plays Princeton
the operation of its Eleccampaign with a 27-1 record. Blackmon and Linton Townes com- minute scoring drought by tipping in result of winning the Pac-10 title and Tuesday night for the Ivy League
tric ~· Fuel
Component
Coupled with top-ranked Oregon bined for 39 points and keyed a l!HJ a rebound with three seconds left in Utah on a coin flip during Saturday's championship after the Quakers
Clause , and related matters.
This hearing ·is
State's 87.07 upset by No. 5 Arizona first-halt spurt that sent James the third overtime, leading Syracuse , . . - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ---1
scheduled to begin at
State on Saturday, the Blue Demons Madison on to a 69-60 victory over over Villanova 83-M in the Big East
9:30 a.m. on Monday.
could go into the Mideast regionals Richmond in the ECAC South playof- playoffs. The victory, however, did
April 6. 1981 . at the
not assure the Orangemen a berth in
as the nation's No. l team . They're fs .
offices of the Commis·
currently No. 2.
North Carolina won the ACC the NCAA playoffs beeause the Big
sion, 375 South High
Both DePaul and Notre Dame, playoffs for the ninth time and third East does not yet qualify
Street,
Columbus , Oh io
ranked sixth in the country, were in five years with a stirring 61~ vicSaturday'! Collexe Ba1UtbaU sc:-Oll!s
43215.
picked as at-large entries Sunday for tory over Maryland. James Worthy
EAST
All- interested parties will
Brollfn 7~. Harvard 66
the 4&amp;-team NCAA playoffs, which scored 19 points for the Tar Heels,
Penn 76, Colwnbia 11
be given an opponunity
.and a layup by Jimmy Black broke
begin this Thursday.
Princeton 33, Cornell &lt;16, OT
to be heard . Further inYale :,J, DartmouLh 51
Other teams had to make the field . the seventh tie of the second balf.
MIDWEST
formation
may be ob the hard way - by winning conRob Williams scored 37 points and
Illinois 96 , Northwestern 76
tained
by
,contacting
the
Indiana 69, Mich.lgun St. t3
ference tournaments over the Michael Young 18 as Houston sewed
Commission.
Ohio St. 78. Iowa 7tl
weekend. The most recent to do this up t~e Southwest Conference tourPurdue 67, Michigan 61, OT
Wisconsin 60, Minnesota 58, OT
THE PUBLIC UTI(ITIES
was Howard University, which won nament with an 84-59 victory over
FAR WESt
COMM
ISSION OF OHIO
the Mid Eastern Athletic Conference Texas. Tony Guy , Darnell Valentine
Air Forre 70, Colorlldo St. -13
Arizona St. 87 , Oregon St. 67
Bv :
David M. Polk ,
tournament with a 6tHJ3 victory over and Art Housey combined to score 61
Brigham Yoonll 95, Utah 76
Secretary .
North Carolina A\;T Sunday.
points and lead Kansas to an 80-U
Hawaii 79, TeUis-EI Paso 75
•
Ore15:on 79 ..o\dzona 1~
Howard was among II first-timers rout of Kansas State in the Big Eight
in the NCAA's Division I playoffs. finals.
, - - - - - - - - -----'--------- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - L - - - - - - - - - - Th e Jayhawks will meet
Others who made it for the first time
as the result of tournament victories Mississippi in the first round of the
Saturday were : Long Island Univer- West Regional in Wichita Friday
sity, Mississi ppi. Tennessee- night and Kansas Coach Ted Owens
Chattanooga, Mercer, Southern conunented: "Bob Weltlich is a BobUniversity, Ball State, Fresno State, by Knight protege, so we know
Idaho , Northeastern and James they'll play tough man-for-man
defense and have motion on offense.
Madison.
UU won the Metro Division finals They'll be a well-coached team."
Incidentally, the Big Eight had
of the Eastern Collegiate Athletic
Conference playoffs with a 77-72 three teams entered in the NCAA
triumph over !ona behind Earl play offs for the first time in its
Fuller's key nine second-half points. history when the tournament selecMississippi took the Southeastern tion committee picked Kansas State
Conference playoffs with a 66-62 and Missouri to go with the playoff
triumph over Georgia as Elston Tur- champion.
""This brings us a high level of
ner scored 22. The Rebels' upset was
apropos for a tournament studded respectibility, to the point where our
with shockers, as Louisiana State, basketball really is," said Big Eight
Kentucky and Tennessee - all Top Corrunissioner Steve Hatchell. " It's
20 teams ~ went down in earlier a real testimony to the coaches and
games.
the strong basketball interests in the
Mississippi had been pi cked to conference."
finish ninth in the SEC this season.
Lennie McMjllian's 20 points
Nick Morken's 24 points led Ten- helped Pittsburgh beat Duquesne IHneseee-Chattanooga · over Ap- 60 in the championship game of the
palachian State in the Southern Con- Eastern Eight tournament .
Western Kentucky survived a
ference playoffs. Mercer got 30 points from Tony Gat~is to defeat second-half rally by Murray Stale,
Houston Baptist 72.07 in the Trans regained the lead and, behind Percy
•
America Conference finals. Alvin White's 18 points, defeated the
Jackson's 19 points triggered Racers 71.07 to win the Ohio Valley
Southern University over Jackson Conference tournament. Tony CostState 69-63 in the Southwestern ner scored 23 points and sparked St.
Athletic Conference playoffs.
J oseph's, Pa., to a 63-00 victory over
Ray McCallum had 24 points as American University in the East
Ball State beat Northern Illinois 79- Coast Conference playoffs.
.66 in the Mid-American Conference.
Mike Olliver scored 35 points as
Rod Higgins' three-point play with Lamar rolled past · Louisiana Tech
3:23 left helped Fresno Stale beat 83-69 in the Southland Conference
San J ose State 52-48 in the cham- finals. Derek Smith had a game-high

Come and Compare

By Associated Press
The DePaul Blue Demons have
put an exclamation point on their
season with a victory ov~r Notre
Dame ~ and now it's full speed
ahead for the NCAA basketball tour-

NOW UNDER NEW
MANAGEMENT

p.m.

Ba rberton 20-3 vs . E. C.1eveland Shaw,
Friday, 9 p.m.
.Championship

Saturda)', 7·30

p.m.

AI Ohio Wesleyan Uoiwrslty
Cuyahoga
Falls
22·2
v~ .
·Columbus
Northland 21·2 , Friday, 7 p.m.
Colwnbus Watterson 19-3 ~·s. New Phlla·
deiP.hia 19-4 , F riday , 9 p.m.
Champion.shtp Saturday, 7;30 p.m.
AI Unh·e n~lty ol Dayton Flddhousr
Dayton Stebbins 20--4 V5 . Darton Patterson 23-0, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Cil1. Mother of Mercy 1$-7 v~. Cin. O&lt;tk
Hills 22·1 , Wednesday, 9 p.m.
Ch.ampion.~hip Saturday, I p.m.
CLASS AA Rcgloll&amp;l T011rnameuLoi
At Masstlloc PerTy High &amp;boo)
Ganlon Ce~tho li c 21-3 vs. Kinsman Budger 22-1, Wednesdt~y, 7 p.m.
Bergholz Springfield 21·1 vs. Olrns t~;d
Falls 2J.l. Wednesday, 9 p.m.
Cbamp1onship Saturday , 2:30 · p.m.
AI Salldusky High St' hool
Sw~:~ ntun 17-4 vs. Upper Sandusky 20-2,
Thursday, 7 p.m.
Col(~aler 23-2 vs . Colwnbus Hltl lley 194, Thursday . 9 o.rn.
·

Burton Berkshire 19-5 vs. Windham 21·
0, Fr1day, 9 p.m.
Champ1on.ship &amp;.turday, 7:30 p.m.

AI Flodlay C11Uege
Atilt 18-6 I.'S . North Baltimore 21-3, fri·
day , 7 p.rn.
Delphos St. John 22-2 vs . Edgerton Zl-1 .
Friday. 9 p.m.
Championship Saturday, 7:30 p.m.
At Otterbein c. . u. 1 ~
O&lt;tk Hill 17-' vs . Old Washington Buck·
eye Tr&lt;iil 20-J, F'r1day , 7 p.m.
Bndgeport :!J.-1 v~ . Canal Winchester 240. F'nday, 9 p.m.
Championship Saturday, 7:30 p.m.
At Ulllvenlity of O.ytoo Fl-eldlwu1e
Portsmouth Clay 19-4 vs. Anna 2:1~,
Fnday , 7 p.m.
Georgclown lH vs. Middletown Fenwi l'k 22· 1, Friday, 9 p.m.
Championship Sll turday, :; p.m .

•

BOSTON BUTT

PORK ROAST. •••••••••••••••.•••• JP. 99~

USDA CHOICE

LIVING ROOM

BANKONE.M

BEI)ROOM
KITCHEN
BATHROOM

BANKONEOFPOMEROY
Pomeroy • Rutland • Tuppers Plains
Member FDIC

IN STOCK
NOW

SAVE
AT
STIFFLER'S

USDA CHOICE

English Roast .••• !~•.~ 159 Chicken Breast •••••• ~~·••79~
CENTER CUT
Chuck Roast ......~~. . ~ 129
Chicken Drumstick ••l!~.79c
BONELESS
Chuck Roast ..... ~~~·••'1 69
Chicken Thighs ••••••~~·. 69~
49
Gr. Chuck..........L~;.'1 ·
. k .Li ,
LB 99~
99 Ch 1c en vers •••••••• ~ ••
Bucket Steak •••••LP•• ~·

$
LB.

MAXWELL HOUSE

10 OZ. JAR

GALA
PAPER TOWELS
•

TEEN QUEEN

$.319

NAVY &amp; GRT. NORTHERN

CANNED BEANS

2 ROLL
PKG.

LIMIT 2 PLEASE

4 CANS
'100
DAIRY

•

12oz.

KRAFT

BATHROOM TISSUE

'

RC COLA, DIET RITE, RC 100

COFFEE CREAMER

SOFTWEVE

•

22 OZ. JAR

CARNATION

INSTANT COFFEE

99¢

Fryer Parts .•••••••••••L~~. 79~

Arm Roast ••••••.•• ~~·••~ 149

lade Chuck Roast

18 oz.

BEST OF

AMERICAN CHEESE SINGLES ••• !1 39
KRAFT

2/79~

aoz. 79e
PHILA · CREAM CHEESE ..........
.
KRAFT

LIMIT 2 PLEASE

ORANGE JUICE ••••••••••••• ~~~~; •• .'1 49

BAKERY

STORCK BREAD.................. 4/'1 29
KR1SPY KREME

GLAZED DONUTS •••••••••• !:.~~.~

SMALL EGGs·

,

...'1 29

HOSTESS TWINKlES••••••••••••• 3/'1

d

j

--

FROZEN FOOD SPECIALS

PRODUCE

9

OOl'l

00

HOLSUM BREAD •••••••••••2!.~~~ . 2/'1 09

I

89~

FAMILY PACK FRYERS

BUDGET PRICED
t

SLAB . BACON

LB.

,

WALLPAP.ER

WHOLE

. ..
LB '1 19
Bol ogna ••••.•••.•••••.•••••••
~.
.
LB 99~
Ch un k Bologna ••••••••••••
.-.

s

CORN FLAKES
You should expect a lot from your financial institution. for example, you should
expect interest on your checking account.
BANK ONE's . HECKING TWO plan gives you just that.. and
along with interest on checking, BANK ONE gives you a staff of
professionals experienced in handling your checking needs and
solving any problems you might have. But checking with interest is
only a part of the full services and conveniences you can expect
from BANK ONE. We also give you things like our unique Total
Account Bank Statement ... one of the most complete monthly
reporting systems available. It lists all your checks in numerical
order and in the order your transactions are cleared by the bank.
And that makes balancing your checking account much easier.
If you get checking w1th interest, you should also get full service
banking with it. You should get CHECKING TWO at BANK ONE.

Ph. 992-5191

STORE SLICED

GROUND .BEEF

KELLOGG'S

•

CHECK THEM!

12 oz. Bacon •••••••.••••••• ~. 99~

Tournament pairings
Championship ·Saturday,. 2:30 p.m.
At Otterbeio CoUege
Ne"· Le:dngton 18-5 vs. Marion Ple.aSIInl
2+-1 , Thursday, 1 p.m.
Warsaw River VIew 22-2 n. Uhrich!·
\'ille Claymont 2'H. Thursday, 9 p .m.
Championship Saturday, 2:30 p.m.
At UnlversUy of Daytoa Fleldllouae
Gallipolis 19-1 V.li . Cin. Reading 26-0,
111ui"Sdcty, 7 p.m1
J~tmestown
y r~nevi ew
22·1 vs. St.
Paris Graham 18-6, Thul"3day, 9 p.rn :
Championship Saturday, 3 p.m.
Class A Re•loaal Tounaameub!
At CuUege af W001kr
A-;hland Mapleton Z3.{] v~ . MaMfield St.
Peter 18-9. Friday , 1 p.m .

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO
LIMIT QUANTITIES.

.

12 oz. Wieners ••••••••••••••• 89~

•

Ohio H.S. Girls Bask ~&gt;tbsll
CLASS AAA R~gioual Twrll&lt;lm~o\.s
At Sandu,sky High School
Toledo Libbey 19-3 v,s. I~K ewood 2.1.:1.
Friday, 7 p.m.
Mansfield Malabar 24-&lt;1 \'S. Brecksville
21·2, Friday. 9 p.m.
Championship Saturda}', 7.30 p.m.
AtMa!l!lilllnn Pll'! rry lligh Srhool
Mentor 22.·2 v.s . Salem ro-3, Friday . 7

..

Our Every Day Low Prices.

I

•

DAIRY

$}79

10 LB. MAINE POTATOES ............. '1 99

VALLEY BELL

CABBAGE.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••L.~ ..

2% MILK ........ :.~:;~.~ ..

19c

CELERY••••••••••••• ·•••••••••••• ~ ••••••~T!-_L~. 49~
'•

3 LB. APPLES••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '••

89$

.

�Pomeroy

Page-8 The Daily Sentinel

Monday, March 9, 1981

Middleport, Ohio

•

Girl Scouts honored week of March 8-14

~

· ·1·1ay, March 9, 1981

The Dail

I? om

_o!CKTRACY

Television
•
•
VIewmg

\

Girl Scouting 1980s style is more than just a " look" or a particular
way of doing things - it' s an approach to living for today's girls and
young women that is positive, flexible , balanced.
As the world's largest organization for girls begins its 70th year, it
may point with justifiable pride to its chief accomplishment - having
transformed women' s aspirtations of yesterday, revolutionary for
their time, into today's concrete realities. The impact of Girl Scouting
on the lives of the present generation will be felt through the eighties
and beyond.
For today' s Girl Scout, " being prepared" means that the youngest
Girl Scout as well as the teen member is taking her future seriously,
thinking about and planning for what she win go with her life. Already
familiar with the technologies that are swiftly cbanging our everyday
methods qf working and of relating to each other, Girl Scouts in turn
are becoming the innovators of tomorrow's technologies, the architects of projects to provide action models for others.
For all they have done and are yet to do, we're grateful to the Girl
Scouts of our community and salute them on their birthday , March 12,
and throughout Girl Scout Week, March 6 through 14.

Carolyn Casto

Tammy Capehart

EVENING

U'fA WAillri C 1&lt;

\

J

•
Shari Cogar

Pam Riebel

FIFTIES-SIXTIES-ST. PATRICK'S DAY DANCE- A "remember
when" dance will be staged by the Middleport PTA Saturday night from 8
to midnight in the Middleport Elemenlary School Auditorium, and lbe
public is invited. Kenny Hysell, popular disc jockey of the fifli~,aod sillties, will emcee the dance wblch wtulnclude a "name that 11111e contest
as well as a dance contest, with prizes for the winners. Relresbmenta will
be sold during the evening. Tickets wtll be available at the door or may be
purchased in advan.c e from any of!lcer, Mike Gerlach, Shirley Smith,
Sheila Reeves, Peggy Wo.od, Martha Klein, or Kay Logan. The eooliB ~a

I
Downette Norris

·'Susan ]ett

Sentinel Social Calendar
MONDAY
SOUTHERN Junior High Athletic
Boosters Monday at 7:30 p.m. at
junior high. Plans for banquet will
be made.
MEIGS COUNTY JAYCEES Monday at 7:30 p.m. in their new quarters over Elberfelds.
REFUNDERS CLUB, 6::W p.m.
Monday at the Riverboat Room,
Diamond Savings and Loan'.
TWIN CITY SHRINE CLUB, Monday at the clubhouse in Racine.
Steak fry at 7 p.m. preceding the
meeting. All club members invited.
RUTLAND PTO, 7::W p.m. Monday at the school. Fathers' Night to
be observed. Basketball game to
follow.
OHIO ETA PHI CHAPTER, Bela
Sigma Phi Sorority, 7: 30. p.m.
Tuesday at the Mei gs Inn .
Nominating committee to meet at
6:30p.m.
SPECIAL MEETING, Ohio Valle y
Commandery 24, Knights Templar,
7:30p.m. Monday ; order of the temple to be conferred.
TIJESDAY
ALL PARENTS of Meigs High
School juniors or seniors invited to a
meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
high school library to discuss
possible activities for Meigs JuniorSenior Prom night, May 9. Interested parents who cannot attend
meeting leave a message at school
for Dorothy J . Oliver, junior class
advisor, or call her at992-2570 after
school hours.
REGULAR MEETING, Racine
Lodge 461, F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday.
PARENTS OF BAND members
and future band members of
Eastern School District invited to an
Eastern Band Boosters meeting 7:30
p.m. Tuesday in band room at high
school
MEIGS HIGH School Athletic
Boosters, 8 p.m. Tuesday at high
school; all interested parents and
patrons invited.
MEETING TO organize Ducks
Unlimited Chapter for area 7 p.m.
Tuesday at Point Pleasant Junior
High School.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
CHURCH
The Christian Science Church was
first organized in 1878 and tt!l!k its
present form in 1892 with the Mother
Church, the First Church of Christ,
Scientist, in Boston.

TUESDAY
CHESTER TOWNSHIP Trustees
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at Chester
Town Hall.
FREE BLOOD PRESSURE clinic
Tuesday from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at
Harrisonville Town Hall. Sponsored
by Harrisonville Senior Citizens
Club.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Amateur Gardeners, Wednesday, 6:30p.m . at the
home of Mrs. Ferman Moore.
Covered dish dinner. Mrs. Alice
Thompson to be the guest demonstrator.
SOUP DINNER,
Ra c ine
Methodist Church, United Methodist
Women to sponsor. Serving to begin
at 4 p.m. in church annex .
SYRACUSE PTO, Wednesday,
7::W p.m. at elementary building .
Program by the Mental Health Center.

IHTERN DIDN'T ~ND
6LAME HIM,
ANNIE·· I FELT
DEDICATE II T'
MEDI CINE, DR. 5UE ... THE SAllE 'f!A'i ...

TOO

WEIGHT LOSS AWARDS- Belva Schuler, right, was tbe lop loser
for 1980 in"thc Rutland TOPS OH t456 and was prestnted a certificate, ribbon and c'ash award in recognition of her weight loss durlllfl tbe year.
Other winners were Marcia Elliott, the Stork Division winner, Marcia
Barrett, the Fifth Division winner, and Sandra Sergent, the runnel'up In
the Fifth Division, pictured left to right.

C. J. Harris, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Jeff Harris, celebrated his third birthday recently with a party. Attending were his parents, Jeff and
Deborah Harris, his sister, Hillery,
his maternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Earl P . Cross, Racine,- his
paternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles R. Harris, Portland,
his maternal great-grandmother,
Lena Holter, Racine, and Mr. and
Mrs. Gary Norris, daughter, Kendra, Racine, Diana. Denise and
Della Cross , Columbus, and Frank
Mornone, Lol'i and John , Dublin.

OH, YES! I THOU6HT MY Elt'iHT
DID7 1 YEARS OF PRE· MED AHV IIEDICAL
SCHOOL HAD SEEM SHEER HELL6UT IT GEEMED LlllE HEAVEH
YOU

;UPit'~l\t:v

TO
IHTEitHitk.11

ADA - WilliamS. Stanley, Shade ,
ha s
c omp leted
gr a duati o n
requirements for the bachelor of
science degree at Ohio Northe rn
Unive rsity in Ada .
Stanley. the son of Mr. and Mrs.

~:i
•'•

::
:
·, •'·

~{t

::

generations in the past. this
epidemic maims rather than
kills.
Individually, it robs a per·
son of awarlme!!ls and stifles
pride . In the family, it
magnifies problems that
already exist. Nationally, it
steal s the country 's greatest
resource the formative
years of its brightest, mos t
imaginative people , its
children , the pedestal for t he

'fhe eVidence is readily vlsi ble - millions or drunk or
stoned young American s
whose families must cope with
this growing hazard. But it is
not a problem without solution . The difficulty is in get·
tiilg down to doing something
about it. As early as 1972,
Mitchell Rosenthal and Ira
Mothner reported in "Drugs,
Parents and Children: The
Three-Way Connection."

"When you come up against
drugs , most important is the

~ ~
HOM~

l£H

1

OLP J..:J JU5T KNOW
uUY ~ITH THE &amp;EARP YOO HIM F~OM HERE,
WEltE TALKIN' TO - ~ &lt;C"C"l ~ISTER ... HE
NEVER SAIO HIS
l'fHAT'$ Hl6
LAD'(Q r-r---~

HAME -

r emot e-c ontr olled robot , a demon s tr a ti on of a n extraordinary new
form ol sports training featuring ba seba ll st ar Mit c hell Pag e, and a
gh ost who ha unt s a toy sto re. (60
mins.)

H E DOES YOU R BID·
DING , BUT WON' T HIS
F'R&lt; END5 ioJOTICE TH E
CHANG E IN HIM ?

NO ~ HE WltL

RETURN TO
NORMj:l.,.l A S

SOON -"S H E

Co mpletes BS degree·----- - -- - -

:

grammar school playground, a
few not quite out.
Nor is it any longer on urban or suburban phenomenon .
In rural areas, three out of ten
young adults are current mori·
juana users.

OF lHAT

'bJ TN&lt;:6 GfE

SEFS TH EM!

By JOHN BARBOUR
The Associated Press

Of young Americans, 12 to
I 7, federal figures show 31
percent, almost one of three,
have used marijuana . That is
more than double the figure
for 1972 . More s ignificantly
17 percent in this age group
are current users - up from
seven percent in 197 2.
Of young American s. 18-25 ,
68 percent. more than two out
of three. have used marijuana,
up from 48 percent in 1972.
Again more significantly 40
percent
this age group are
current users . That's four out
of len - and of those. two out
of three admit they use the
drug five or more days a
month.
Marijuana 'use is heavier
among males, but the difference is rapidly dissolving.
The U.S . Department of
Health and Human Services.
estimates that in the next few
years as · many females as
males may smoke the drug.
Nor does marijuana use ex-.
ist alone. It frequently goes
hand in hand with the use of
another widely available drug,
alcohol . The combination is
dulling the senses of a growing number of young
Americans, reaching now to
the earliest ages of junior high
school, kids just out of the ·

~'( OI~'T

ALLEY OOP

J oseph Stanley, Jr., 4()242 S.R. 33,
Shade, majored in pharmacy in the
Raabe College of Pharmacy and
Allied Health Sciences at Ohio Northe rn . He is a 1973 graduate of Mci~s
High School.

She'll never tallt.
If we
a few
now~ I just it. now less bodies in here
·q
I "(;,
it would be
helpful'

The Epidemic

or

Celebrates birthday

AROUND ON A
CfCU.TCH!

... c; EE, THAT YOUNtS OH, YOU REALLY

future .

C. ]. Harris

&amp;ELATEDLY THAT
HE'S HOI!IE!t i N 6 '

~MIT, I'lL. HA.'IiET1C}\A~ llt&lt;e5!

knowledge tha t. y uu can in ·
deed do somet hing . You can
ulnw~ t ulwn ys t.urn you r
childre n from drugs. And if
you do n't, who e iRe will'!"
The d iffi cult y is tha t many
pare nts art'! arnhivalenl or confu sed a.bout marij uana, o produc t of wave ring atti tud e~ in
society itself t oward the drug
in Lhc Sixties and Seventies.
Its use is wove n in t imately
into the lives of y oungsters tod• y. ll i ~ iJvuiluhlP ut ~c h oo l
and '!JteN chool hangouts.
Rock music is lade n with drug
rcrcrcnces. 1-t ead s hops proliferate all ove r tho nation.
~e lling drug puruphcrnuliu u ~
openly •• soft drinks. Rock
concerts are cln!Jded with the ·
brow~ haze and sweet smell of
gruss. It is equated with free·

d om of choice and growing up
in t he ey es of some teenagers.
For a long time, there were
q uestions about the health
ha za rd s cf marijuana. If one
study found it harmful. the
nex t found it no worse than
cigarettes . If one study warn ed about po.,ible effects on
th e sex organs , the next one
found it no worse than alcohol.
This is settling out now .
Over 400 separat.e chemicals
ha ve been ide ntified in the
marijuana plant . The mindaltering chemical is cAlled
d e I La ·9· tetra hy drocanno binol
or Til C. It is picked up by the
fatty tis.ues of the body and
cor remain in the body for up
to a month .
Even though research into
marij.uuno 's effects is rei·
nti vely new , it is clesr that it
has a number of unhealthy ef·
kc tR on a number of organs.
s tepping up heart rate, reduc·
ing lung efficie ncy, distorting
pt•rception , clouding the view
uf the o utside world while ex·
~~ ~J.w rulin~ th~ . mental and
t 1 11lotio nal fn ctors of the inside
wodd . Furthermore. street
nutr :juana today has five
tim ~s more THC than marij ua na a vailuble five yean~ ago,
~hunk s to more exotic strains
of ~ h e plant und betler cultiva·
lio n.
But the real alarm· comes
from the increasing uae of
mu rljuana by youngsterl!l ae
young us 11 or t 2. Marijuana
doc• more than dull. It

WI:'&lt; NlP.

13UT I &lt;II GOING
WITH HIM ! TUTU
CAN LOOK ~FTE R
rHE eUSINESS WHILE
X'M GONE /

., '

•,..

1\'HO KNOWS? 'IAY~E POt&lt;ING '\ROUND
DO WN THERE .. ASKi NG QU E STIO~S
REVISITING PLACES l VE ~EE N W!L~

RESTORE IIY MEMO RY.

'

IIAH NI·: Y

THAT'S A

BALD· FACE
LIE!!

i

1.

•

distorts.
At th e s ame time a
young ster •hould be exploring
the balance between freedom
nnd re 9pon•ibility, drug
d epe nde nce is a blinding
•!!ent. Adolescence is a tough
t•me whon a person decides
which elements of childhood
s hould continue into adulthood and which should be left
behind. Marijuana or alcohol
dependence stymies or delaya
the decision·making.
Copyri1Jht

Pre~~ #I .

PEt\ NUTS

HER E5 THE lliORLD WAR [
FlYING ACE WALKI NG
OUT TO f-115 PLANE ...

IT IS DAWN ..

A LI611T MIST
15 FALLING

OUR SQUADRON COMMANDER
SAVS TH IS WILL BE
A PERFECT DA'{ FOR
A SURPRISE ATTACK...

0
raJ (l&lt;!J BILLY GRAHAM
CRUSADE
{li ) PA'VAROTTI: KING OF THE
HIGH C 'S Th• s prog ram presents a
doc um entary p o rtrait of the most
acc laimed te nor o f o ur tim es ,
Lu ciano Pav arott •.
Ctl] MOVIE ·(DRAMA!"'"' "Lion
In Winter" 1968
8:30 W NEW BIBLE BAFFLE SHOW
{4) MOVIE - \ADVENTURE)'"
" Superman: The Movie" 1978
8 :58 (3 I CBN UPDATE NEWS
9 :00 {3) 700 CLUB
( 8J~~GI ·DYNASTY Mallhew' sex·
ci tement over striking o il is tem pere d wh en C laudi a's repr esaefl
h ostility provo k es an angry accuSiil ion and lind say co nfronts him
with kn owledge of her ille gitimacy.
(60 min s.)
0 (B) ~Ql M.A .S.H. Colonel Poller
kn o w s he ha s o nly two w8eks t o
reduce hi s bloo d pressure, but he
bndles at th e 4077 th 's c orisplra cy
to 1'1elp him .
(j) GREAT. PERFORMANCES:
DANCE IN AMERICA 'Nureyev and
th e Jollr ey Ballet In Tribute to
Nij lnsk y' tn one o f th e mo st ambi tio us 'Dan ce In Am eric a' produ c tio ns ev er unde rtaken , RIJdoll Nur·
eye v a nd th e Jolfr ey Ballet dance
I hree Nij uTs ky work s: ' Petro ~J c hka' ,
'Spe c tre de In Rose' and the sen·
sua ! ' L ' ~pre s - m1di d' un Fauna ' .
9:30 0 ( l)(fOJ HOUSE CALLS
10:00 12), 0 { 1) FLAMINGO ROAD
C hn s tie, a yo ung l ady hiding a
sha dy pas t, pur sue s and seduce s
Sk1ppe r, but two people Hre deter mm ed to end the at!a.r · Const anc e ,
wh o's ont o C hri s ti e's plan , and
Tony .the yirl 's un coulh andjealous
boyfrie nd . (60 mm s.)
(0I l12i ID SOAP Jo die balll os o
ferocious ma r tialart s eKp ert I o re s·
c ue b a by Wendy frQm a Kung Fu
l o rlre s s, and Ma r'( reve a l s wh o
Da nny's !ath er really IS . (60 mins .)
0 ( 8 ~ (10) LOU GRANT Whil e
Anima l1sdrawn ulto a strange quest
to rind out more a bouiB pr etlygirl's
tr a g 1c death , Trlb manBgemBnt is
sho k enb y a threa t to make public a
l•st o f staff sa la ries. (60 mins .)
10o25 {5) TBSEVENING NEWS
10:28 {l ) CBNUPDATENEWS
10:30 i &gt;l RISE AND BE HEALED
10:45 t t ) MOVIE -{DRAMA)" '1"1 "Mag·
ntrtcent Ambersons " 1942
10:58 ( 31 CON UPDATE NEWS
11 o00 121 0 18) [7 ) 0 [ 8 ) {10) ~ Gl
NEWS
{31 FESTIVAL OF PRAISE
[4/ MOVIE · {SUSPENSE) "
" Silent Scream' ' 1980
1111 OUTER LIMITS
11 o25 15) MOVIE ·{MYSTERY) "II
" Sylvia" 1965
11 :28 13 ) CBNUPOATENEWS
11 :30 ( 2 \ 0 171 THE TONIGHT SHOW
'The Bes t ol Carso n' Hos t Johnn y
C a r son Gues t s J o hnny M a thi S,
K el ly Mo nt ei th , M arll u l ola .
(R epea t. 60 mm s )
~ ll..ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
\ 8 l 112' ID
ABC NEWS
NIGH TUNE
0 { 8) C8SLATE MOVIE ' QUINCY
M E A l c~ l for L• vl nQ' St ar s: Ja ck
KltJ g mnn . Jo hn S . AHyin . QIJin c y
p er tOrmsanaut opsy on a y oungboy
w ho hA$ n11s tu k enly bee n labele d
ns be my ! Ci u•dc d, but wh o re ally Is
a ut i Sti C (R up ea t) 'HAARY -0 ·
Ten d er Ki ll1ng Core' St ar s: Dav id
Jans~o n . Anth ony Zer b o Harr y
t1r cs 10 p ro ve llwt h1 s In end w Rs
tramed tor the m~Jr do r of e doctor
(Ft epe at)
1101 MOVIE · (JUVENILE) ••
" Smoky " 1966
12 o00 16' 112' ID FANTASY ISLAND
{...fl.l wrt r HI I I,; ~ r e t e1 soo n t o b e
cor onn tc d ,, s o rw o llh eworld's las 1
1til 1ny mOntu c h s seek:'i a las t
1:hl tnc e 1o krrow 111e common! ouc h
(R Oe.£al . 10 mm s )
12 o30 i 2 1U I 11 TOMORROW COAST TO -COAST Gues t s Mo nt o1th un d
H:111d (t)O 11111to.; )
• ' t.tOVIE -( HORROR) • • 11: " The
Layac y " 197 8
12: 58 3 ' CBN SPORTS REPORT
I 00 &gt;' 0 JAME S KF.NNEDY
1· t u f\
C AR O L BURNETT AND
F~ltNDS
It: l:J f\ILW::-.

1981, Thl A•oci.ai.MI

NEXT: Peer Prouuro

r

J

LULKS
{ ~ I

[J

t
I KJ J

IATEQUE

m

O~LY TO DISCOVeR

--!MARIJUANA AND YOUR C H I L D - - - - - - - - - - -- -- - -

FIRST OF A SERIES
There is an epidemic loose
upon America 's children .
Unlike the plague or smallpox
or cholera that has wiped out

~

ANN IF.

Wolf Pen News Notes
Joseph Evans, Tyson, and Mr. and
Mrs. Jolm E. Murphy and Chris of
Racine and Mr. and Mrs. Gregory
Davis, Ashli of Butternut, Pomeroy .
Mr. and Mrs. Paul McElroy, Jr.
and family were recent visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. .Carl McElroy of
Columbus.
•
Dale Russell of Colwnbus was
visitor of Uncoln Russell .
Bryan Reeves, Chester, was
recent weekend visitor of· grandmother, Mrs. Dorothy Reeves.

J...EG

H!SADLe;; VA~LE-Y-­
RUN TRAPLINE WHERE
WE ~OT K~OW ABOUT
IT\ ME STEP lioJ !!fAR
TRAP!

6ROTWER ...

Tammy Capehart is a 14-year old
freshman at Eastern High School.
She belongs to the Southeastern
Meigs County Cadette Troop 1180
and has had a totaf of eight years in
scouting. Presenting her first class
award to her were her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Jordan of Pomeroy.
Carolyn Casto is a 14-year old
freshman a.t Meigs High School and
is also a member of the Southeastern
Meigs County Cadette Troop. She
also has completed eight years in
scouting.
Also a member of the Cadete
Troop in Southeastern Meigs County
is Pam Riebel who is a freshman at
Eastern and has had six years in
scouting.
Dawnette Morris belongs to the
Harrisonville Cadette Troop 1116
and is a freshman at Meigs High
School. She has had six years in
scouting.
Both Shari Cogar and Susan Jett
are students at Southern High School
and both 'belong to the Meigs County
Senior Troop 1208. Both have had six
years in girl scouting.

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Evans,
Tyson, were recent weekend visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Mittlebellers
of Christian burg.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Smith,
Kanauga, were recent Sunday
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Charley
Smith, Kevin and Charles Knapp . .
Mrs. Thelma Giles was recent
visitor of Mrs. J. R. Murphy and
Peggy. ·
Mrs. J . R. Murphy and Peggy
visited a Saturday with Mr. and Mrs.

WHO ATTACKED

l'iHIT,. FOOL C@ME- TO

1 4 ':J

5 I MOVlf · IOJtA.MAJ
101 1

" Mt~lortv '

2 00

1'

lrt i\ N ~ FORMFO

Nl I;VI

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
byHenriArnoldandBobLee

~~0.';.,~~.!:,-~ r .... , .,... "'&lt;

&amp;:oo m o m o r al i1QJ C
1ZlGI NEws
W RAINBOW FACTORY
(f)
CAROL BURNETT AND
- FRIENDS
(j) ABC NEWS
([) 3· 2- 1 CONTACT Programming
may be int errupted du e to
~dging .
·
l!ll OVER EASY 'NutriliOA' Guest :
Or . Jean Meyer, presid ent of Turt s
University . Ho st : Hugh Down s .
(Closed-Captioned; U.S.A.)
6 :30 1])0 ('7] NBC NEWS
[}) THE DOOR
BOB NEWHART SHOW'
(j) FACE THE MUSIC
0 C1J ®J CBS NEWS
fll WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
(Jj)•HISTORY OF SPACE FLIGHT
~iJ GI ABC NEWS
6:58 CJl CON UPDATE NEWS
7:00 (2) 0 PM MAGAZINE
C3J NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
(5) ALLIN THE FAMILY
COl@ GI FAMILY FEUD
(1) BILLY GRAHAM CRUSADE
0 liJ TIC TAC DOUGH
(9) (}1)
MACNEIL-LEHRER
REPORT
{12) NEWS
7:30 (2) 0 BULLSEYE
(&gt;] WORDS OF HOPE
ffi HBO SPORTS MAGAZINE:
1980 IN REVIEW An oxc iting loOk.
at the heroe s in 1980's sorts
headlines .
(5) SANFORD AND SON
(0) 0 (~) JOKE-R'S WILD
(o) ® QICK CAVETT SHOW
{10) HOLLYWOOD SOUARES .
1:ilGI FACE THE MUSIC
C
7:58 {3) CBNUPDATE NEWS
8:00 ffi O (f) LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE laura In gall's heart is bro k.e nwh enh erlath errules that she is
l oa yo ung t o acce RI Almanza
W ilder 's pr oposal of marriage; and
th e Ol esons ar e ama zed when Ac ·
countant Perc1val Dalton turns their
loud -mo uth e d,
de manding
daught er into a do cile , obedient
woman , and tak es her as his wife
(Rep eat;
2
hr s.}
(Cioseij ·
C apl 1oned: U .S. A.)
i l ) AMERICAN CATHOLiC
( 5) MOVIE-{DRAMA)'''' "Alfie''
1966
.
{ 8i(f2) GI THAT'S INCREDIBLE A
d rama t ic re sc ue attempt by a

SATE ESE'&lt;;

First Class A wards

I

INDIAN-- I!IREAI&lt;.

EAS~ ON THE:
TRAIL WAS MA~Y

Six girl scouts receive
Six. Meigs County girl scouts have
achieved the First Class Award, one
of the highest achievements in the
scouting program, and were
recognized and presented their
awards in a recent candlelight
ceremony at Camp Kiashuta .
They are. Tammy Capehart,
daughter of Mrs. Patty Gapehart,
Minersville, and Michael Capehart,
Middleport;
Carolyn
Ca sto ,
daughter of Gertrude Casto,
Pomeroy, and Frank Casto, Route 3,
Pomeroy; Pam Riebel, daughter It
Mr. and Mrs. John Riebel, Baum Addition. Pomeroy'; Dawnette Norris,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Norris, Harrisonville; Shari Cogar,
daughter of William ani:! Shirley
Cogar, Minersville; and Susan Jell,
daughter of Jennings and carol Jell,
Minersville.
The First Class Awjrd in Girl
Scouting was the highes! recognition
in the program until September, 1980
when a new program leading to a
Gold Award was initiated.
To achieve the First Class status,
scouts are required to complete six
proficiency badges and four
traditional challenges.

HIM GO HUNTIIoJ(;
WITH TWO ClTHE~

HAD AS~UMED
THE" GIAioJT NUT"

~

.Unscramble these fOur Jumbles
one letter lo each square, to forn1
four ordinary words.

· I I

MARCH 9, 1981

CAPTAIN EASY

ftfl\lNf fi;}'if

~ ~ ~~ ®

"

1'2

Now arrange the circled letters to

form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon .

Prlnranswerher~:
Salurday's

"t I I I

I Jumbles: AWFUL

xI I xr
(Answers tomorrow)

DALLY

CAMPER

KETTLE

Answer · What the nervpus pia ni s t was-

ALL KEYED UP ·
Jumble Book No. , 5; containing 110 puzzles, is available tor 51.75 pottpald
from Jumbla, C!o this newspaper, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07643. Include your
name, address, lip coda and make checks payable to NewspaperbOoks.

BRIDGE
Wise choice cinches game
open one cl ub. South, responds

NORTH
3-9·81
+AK 95:1
.Q4

+2

+AK T53

WEST

+H i

EAST
• Q 10 7 4

• 6 :1

• A98

+.!
+.!1096 6
SOVTit
+6
.K J1Ui52
+ 10 9 6 5:1

tAKQ K7 4

+ \l4

+ 2

Alan. " A wi nning dec1sion .

North-Soulh
Dealer: North
V ulnerabl e:

w~sl

Nurth

Ea§l

South

2t

t+
2+

Pass
Pass
P ass

t•
3Pass
.

Pa:;s
Pa~~

4.

one hea rt and West tries t wo
dia mond s. No rth bids t wo
spades and goes to four hearts
afte r South rebids Lhat'sui t."
Alan : " l assume that West
opens the king of diamonds
and shi fts to a t rump a nd East
t a kes his ace and leads a nolh·
c r one."
Os wald : ··south plays a
third trump and discards a
dub from dummy on the thea·
ry that it someone held five
sp~dcs he might have bid the
SUit so that clubs were mo re
li kely to brea k 5-2 titan
s pades."

Opemng lead :+ K

B"·Oswald Jat"utfv
~uld Alan Sontag ·

(J:; wald . ·· Here 1!'. a ht:tnd
from 19:11 tho! would still be
a modc llod ~J y North e lects to

The spades are 4-3. Now South
simpl y pl ays ace- king small
of spades. rurring the small
one: e nter s' dummy with a
high club : \eaqs a fourth spade
from dummy: and chucks a
dmmond. Eas t is down to
clubs and has to pul dumm y in
all owing South to gel nd of hi s
las t t wo diamonds on th e
other high club and the thir·
leenlh spade."
Oswald: "A beautllul hand.
but a n. cx~ep ti onal We~t player m1gh t ac tually open a
tnnnp . Then South 's unusu&lt;tl
e ntl play co uld no t be
developed-."
tNI-:WSI'A PEH £N TEAPRI SE ASSN J

ACROSS
42 Rational
1 Show approval DOWN
5 Culinary
I African lake
expert
2 Subsist
9 Word with
3 Arab seaport
bound
4 Nuisance
5 Boxed
or away
10 Type of tire
6 Shelter
13 Rosary beads 1 Dutc h
Yesterday's Answer
14 Loath
township
IS Toothed
8 " Hot" store 20 Of the
29 Underground
17 (;reek letter
event
dawn
system
18 " Of Mice
It Phoenician 21 Obtained 32 Highlands
and - "
girl
love goddess 22 Biddy
19 - Luis
12 Shed
23 - brio
33 Olive genus
Obispo, Ca .
16 Distaff
24 Plunder
34 US. agent
20 Plant louse
Fre nch
25 Film sleuth 35 Eli stronghold
2:1Transport
friend
21 Pour off
:11 An e~-Rooney
24 Thick soup
25 Very (mus .J
26 Word ·
with monger
21 Bequest
recipient
28 Legendary
bird
29 Allot
:u! Irish
exclamation
31 Branch
of biology
:16 Pacific
atoll of
WWII fame
38 Before mater
39 Late
!.o+--l- +-+--1ncws hour
40 Fasten
41 Scoot
llAILY

l'RYI'TO&lt;!UOTE - Here's how to work itc
AXYDLBAAXR
Is

LDII:&lt;;t•ELl.OW

One lett!! r simply .,:, tan_d !i for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L s. X fu r the two O's, e tc. Single letters
apos trophes : the length and f o rmation or the words are ali
hmt s. Each da y tht' rode IPtters are ditlcn•nt
! 'R\'PTOQUOTES

T C P W
M PI. Q S

MQWQWI

B W P

T Q F C

II H E F

F CP

RE P

J

S BWI
EUBBW .
O QEHJVZG
Yesterday's Cryptoquote : THr WRONG WAY ALWAYS
SEEMS THE MORP. HEASONABLE .- GEOHGE MOORE
CHAIN CHANGE
ITHACA, N.Y. l AP) - The auto indus try is undergoing a chain reaction .
In 1696, Henry Ford used a chain to transfer power
from his two-cylinde r engine to move the wheels.
By the end of this decade the power path will be
almost tot•lly engine-to-front-axle in the Americanmade automobile, •ccording to Thomas R. Seaman,
executive vice president of Borg-Warner's Morse
division . " ' upplier of chain for front wheel drive cars.

,_ ·

�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Moddleport, Ohoo

Surprise party honors couple
Albert and Sue Goeglem of
Pomeroy were honored recently
woth a surprose 40th weddmg anmversary reception at the Me1gs
Inn Hostmg the recepbon were the1r
son-m-law and daughter, Ray and
Patty Pickens.
The three-tlered heart shaped
cake was accented woth red roses
and topped w:th the numerals "40"
encircled w1th red roses and hearts.
Mrs. Darlene Casto and TraCl
pres1ded at the punch bowl and
solver tea potcher Mrs Donna
Ohlinger and Mrs Pat Martin served the cake and pres1ded at the
silver coffee servJCe
Guests were seated at tables
,overed w1th red cloths and centered
w1th red rose arrangements Hearts
adorned the chandehers and red
tapers completed the decor of the
reception area
Attendmg were Mrs H1lda Wh1te,
Mrs Maf) Pickens, Sr., Mr and
Mrs Ferman Moore, Mrs. Stella
Grueser, Mrs Helen Maag, Mr and
Mrs. M1ke Mullen, Mr. and Mrs
Robert Berry, Mrs Audrey Rowan,
Mr. and Mrs. Don Lorentz, Mr and
Mrs. Avery Goeglem, Mr and Mrs
Alfred Yeauger, Mr and Mrs. Hugh
Martm and sons, Bruce Blackston,
Mr and Mrs Roy G1lhlan, Mr and
Mrs. Paul Eoch, Mannmg Webster,
Dr and Mrs R R Pockens
Mr and Mrs B1ll Cogar, Alfred
Frank, Mrs Mary Baumgardner,
Mr and Mrs. Walter Moms, Mrs
Judy DIXon, Mr and Mrs Roger
Spencer, Mr and Mrs Carl Woii,
Mrs Thelma Doll, Mr and Mrs
Harold Blackston, Heather Kane ,
Mr and Mrs Cash Bahr, Mr and
Mrs Wayne Davos, Mr and Mrs
Denz1I Goeglem, Mr and Mrs Jonas
E Cook, Mrs Phylhs Clark, Natahe
Clark, Mr and Mrs Ke1th Cochran
and Jessoca, Dr and Mrs Clyde
Ingels,
Mr and Mrs W1lham T
I
Roush, Terro, Crockett and Collm,
Mrs. Far1e Kennedy, Mr and Mrs
Ralph Pamter, Mrs. Ehzabeth
Cutler, Mr and Mrs John Redov1an,
Le1gh Ann and Amy Beth, Mrs
Grace Whaley, Mrs June Van

Monday, March 9, 1981

Announcements

Carmel News.,
By the Day

Save Your Vision!

afternoon

of Rae me a recent evemng

COLLECTION OF
ROCKS
A collcctoon of rocks m the rough
shape of a bobycle wheel os located on
the Bo g Horn Mountams of
Wvomong Thought to have been
used b} lndoans around I700 as a
pr umhve astronormcal observatOI y,
ot " ca ll ed the Amer~can
Stonehenge "

and Mrs Albert Goeg!em

1H1.

Vranken, Moss Nelhe Zerkle, Mrs
Lilhan Zerkle, Mrs Hat!le Zerkle,
Mr and Mrs Charles Russell, Mr
and Mrs Frankhn R1zer, Clone
Dalley, Mehssa, Mehnda and Matthew
Mr and Mrs Tom Bo" en
Charlene Goegleon, Mr and Mrs
Charles Goeglem, Mark and
M1chael, Mr and Mrs Marvm
Wh1te, Mr and Mrs M Hannmg,
Dr and Mrs Norman Ehlmger, Ms
Ellen Dutton Koehl, Mr and Mrs
Dale Dutton, Mr and Mrs V~rg1l
Roush, Mr and Mrs Walter
Grueser, Mr and Mrs Herbert
D1xon, Mr and Mrs Lennoe Jewell,
Mr and Mrs Jack Se1denabel,
Terry Sm1th, Mrs. Darlene Casto

and Traco, Mr and Mrs B11l
Ohlmger, Mrs Paulone Atkms, Kerorut Walton, Mr and Mrs Richard
Chambers, Mr and , Mrs Ray
Pickens, N1chola Dawn anq Noelle
Renee
Sendmg cards, goft&gt; and flowers
but unable to attend were Mr and
Mrs George Fo~ner, Mr. and Mrs
Betty P1ckens, Mr and Mrs Davod
Gene Conde, Mr and Mrs Pete Holter. Mrs Gay Gaul. Mr and Mrs
Elberfeld and M1ke, Mr and Mrs J
James Folmer and Cheryl, Mrs
C Wyatt Mr and Mrs Robert Rot- Wo~na Bobbec and Tony Mr and
chie, Mr and Mrs VJrgJI Wtndon, Mrs Phihp Somth. Mr and Mrs
Mr and Mrs Fred Sn11th Mr and James W11I and farruly, Mrs Elma
Mrs Jun Nelson, Mr and Mrs Karl Epple, Mr and Mrs •Charles Theos,
Krautter, Mr and Mrs Pete Mr and Mrs Charles Groffoth , Mr.
Michael, Mr and Mrs . John Halley, and Mrs Dave De\\hurst, Mr and
Mr and Mrs Perry Roggs, Mr and Mrs Guy Hysell. and Mr and Mrs.
Mrs Robert Eason and famdy, M1 s
Moiiard Van Meter

T1red of penny pinching?"&gt;
Housewives and mothers.
change spare t•me mto $$$$
FleXIble hours, excellent
earnings, free wardrobe
Two evenmgs a week For
more lnformat1on call 992
3941 or 669· &lt;S35

Last week was Save You1
V1s1on Week and a good tune for
the over 40 crowd to plan and
start a vtsion care mamtenance
program It bods down to an annual optometroc examonatton to '
check eye health and determme
the need for readmg glasses.
b1focals, trofocals or contact lenses Contacts are mcreasmgly
popular woth those over 40, Dr
Balles sa1d Today's lenses are
comfortable to weao and they
provode the natural VISIOn that
goes w1th today's hfestyles Some
people weal bofocal hao d contact
lenses Others prefer CJther a
hard or soft lens on one eye only
for near vts1on Still others have
one contact lens fm near and
another for distance VISIOn
The ophons arc many and
people over 40 should discuss
them w1th theor optomct11st, Dr
B31les sa1d, to fond what os nght
for them

The !mal article provided by
1he Tro-county Optometric
Soc1ety to celebrate Save Your
VISIOn Week addresses the
problems of presbyopoa or old
VISIOn.
If you have a typ1cal warranty
on your eyes, 11 would probably
expore on your 40th birthday just the t1r0e when things are certam to start gomg wrong w1th
your vlsoon "Call ot nature's
planned obsolescence, if you
WlSh, " sa1d Dr. Balles, spokesman for the Tro-county OP'
tometroc Soc1ety. "But the facts
are that after 40 we begm to
notice that our eyes are gradually
Iosmg the ab1hty to focus clearly
on readmg materoal and other
close work ." Unfortunately,

Mr and Mrs Arthur Orr of
C~ester and Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Newman and son, Davod, from
Gabon, Ohio v1soted Mr and Mrs.
Robert Lee and famliy a Saturday
Davod Newman was guest of Bob
B11I Lee a recent Saturday mght
There were 39 present for Sunday
&amp;hool on March I
Betty Van Meter, Sheryl and
Patnck Johnson and Eume Brooker
called at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Wilham Carelton and daughters,
Angeha Dawn, Jenmfer Lynn of
Racme on a recent Sunday evemng
James and Phylhs C1rcle, New
Haven, were at the home of Mary
Corcle a recent Sunday
Mrs. Mary Johnson and fam1Iy of
Belpre, OhiO vos1ted Mr and Mrs .
Douglas C1rcle a recent Sunday
Mr and Mrs Douglas C1rcle
vtsoted w1th Mr and Mrs Warden
Ours of Chester on Wednesday m
honor of Mrs. Ours' borthday
Florence Corcle vosoted Sylv1a
Poole of Oak Grove on Wednesday
Margaret Ann Johnson, Sheryl
and Patnck, v1soted w1th Mr and
· Mrs W!lloam Care!ton and daughter

Monday, March

unhke a washer or car, "you

can't go out and buy a new pa1r of
eyes," Dr. Ba1les satd 11 You
have to mamtam your ongmal

equipment "

4

Mrs Bell spoke of the types of
abuse known to be takmg place 111
Meogs County and what and how
belp can be obtamed She sa1d that a
part of the marroage hcense fee 111
Ohio 1s set asode to share the cost of
provodmg some protectiOn lor those
abused The speaker noted that
Meogs County has no hous111g lor th1s
~urpose but a "Seremty House" os
the goal. Currently "My Soster s
Place" 111 Athens offers aod
Crtsosi111e os a free 24-hour
telephone counsehng serv1ce for
those 111 Gallla, Jackson and Meogs
Counlles, she noted, pomtmg out
that this os a part of the Commumty
Mental Health Center program She

Free to good home, 5 year
old Blue Tick Hound dog
end a black and wh 1te part
Lab RetneYer and Blue
lick J months old 376 6319
6

Lost last Fnday a female
black dog w1th wh1te front
and four Wh1le teet Short
ha1r that 1s part boxer and
part Labrador Answers to
t he name of L1bby Has
1981 dog tag no 00872 Ca ll
aller 5 to 742 3014
Lost Tan &amp; wh1te COII1e
Lost 1n Rockspr1ngs area
Phone Roll1n Radford 992
3912
LOST m Tuppers Pla.ns
Black male poodl e Blue
collar,
name
Pepper
Please cal l 1 love h1m 667
3830

i ·==:::;;P=u;::
bltc Sale

-----

&amp; Auct1on

AUCTION
Large farm
equ1pment auct1on Sat,
March 21st
at S1ders
Equ1pment Co , on U S
Hwy
35 ,
Henderson ,
w VA call lor deta•ls 675
3440 Sa t March 21st 10
am
9_

U1.\ H
Utah ha:; mooc th.111 RO lld!uo .1!
enl.~ton

wh~t; h

ts

a

of

nl:ltJUna l

monwnent

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
Public Not 1ce

FINANCIAL
REPORT OF
TOWNSHIPS

For F1scal Year

Endmg December
51' 1980
Sctp•o Townsh•p
Me1gs County
Rt. 2,
Alabany , Oh10
Feb 25, 1981
1 cerftfy tl'le followmg

report to be correct

Glenn E Jewell

Townsh1_p Clerk

Tel No
698· 5215
SUMMARY OF
CASH BALANCES ,
RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES
Balance
Jan 1, 1920
General Fund
6 810 14
Motor Veh•cle
Lrc;ense Tax
Fund
1 083 24
Gasol•ne Tax

Fund
Road and Br•dge
Fund

J 810 00

Fund
Federal Revenue
Shar1ng Fund

1,307 69

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
C lassifieds and
Savell I

1
I
1
I

I
I
I
1
'I

Total

'I
'
I

:1
1

I
I
1
1
I
I

Wanled
For Sa le
Announcement
For Renl

~

I
I
I
I

1
1
1 2
1 3
1 4
1 s

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I
1
I

I

1

6

7
8
9
10

I 11
I 12

I

I

n
1•

I

L•cense Tax
F und
Gasoline Tal(

Federal Revenue
Shar.ng Fund
2 926 97
Total
59 &lt;~60 78

9,998 12

Th ese c ash rates
mcluae disco unt

I
I
1

I
I
11
I
I
18
I
o9
I
20
----------1
21
I
24
25
26
21
26
29
30
31
32
33
34
35

I
I
I
I
I
I

I
I

13, 278 79

997665
19,879 86
1,580 38

e ANNOUNCEMENTS

1 RENTALS

1- C,rdo!Thintn
l - In Memon.1m
J- Announcemenl s

41- Motule Homn

4- G

~1 - H Ou ,er.tor

il l'!" I

lor R en t

~th•iY

u - Ap,rlmfntl or Iii fill

45- F R ooms
46 - Sp•ce tor R enl

'
lioiPPV Ac.H
' - Loll ollld Found

1- 'l'ardS.Ie

~1 - WAf111!0 IO if@f11

8- PubltC So~le
&amp; AUCI1on

41 - E qu•ornentlor R enr

9 W&lt;tnkd lo Bu)
eEMfiLOYMENT

eMERCHANDISE
~1 - Holl!.ehOid Good!.

U - CB TV Ridoo Equopmenl

U- Ani•QUfl

Wo1nted

~4 - MIH

Mtr01if1doSf

55 - Bu ldmgSI.IOolou
Trionong

' 6- P els l~;~r

Sillr

U - SclloolslnUrucloon
16-

AieloO TV

eFARMSUPPLJEI
&amp; LIVESTOCK

&amp; Cl Re pilr

18- Wantrd To Do

61- Fo1rm Equ pmenl

e FINANCIAL
11 -

U - Wo~nted

64 - l-l.l'f' &amp;

21- Moru.• w lo Loin
Serlf•Ces

eTRANSPORTATJON
ti - Aulos tor So~le

eREAL ESTATE
Jl HomU lor S•lt' l
J' - Mob•l t Home$

1J - ¥•n,&amp;4W 0
1~ - Motar c~Cif\

,Ajuto

75-

lor S.lr
tor §lit
U - 8u\1n r u Budchng s
H - Lot\ I Acruye
U - Rell Est1tt W•nteCI

P;~rt~

&amp; Acceuones
11 .-,c, ulo lhPIIr

Jl - Firm~

J1- Rullors

e SERVICES
11

Want Ad Advert1s1ng
Deadlines
)l)p

Gro~ o n

65- Seed &amp; Fe rtloar

11 - Proii!Uional

1

lo Buy

1'1- Truckslor S1t r

1111uneu
Opporlunol'!'

M

Hom e Improvement\

11- Piumbmyl. E•c•v~tong

ll- E

~Civ11on9

14- Eitclro ctl
I Retroutr•hon

Ortii Y

U - Gtf1tral H.iul mg

II NOoM§IIlHCI...,

U - M H lhplor
11 - Upnol\lerv

fOr MOMd.ly

I
I
I

Rates and Other Informatoon

I

I

1

I

1
1

General Fund
Motor Veh1cle
L1cense Tax
Fund
Gasol1ne Tax
Fund
Road and Br1dge
Fund
F1 re Protect1on

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

I

I

Mao! Thos Coupon woth Remollance
The Daoly Sen tone!
·
Box 729
Pomeroy, Ohoo 45769
.

Expendttures

or Wrote Daoly Sentinel Classifoed Dept
111 Court St ., Pomero.,., o, 45769

I

I

16

2.707 20

PHONE 992-2156

14- BIJI nus
10 00

n

2,818 73

WANT AD INFORMATION

l'l - Sotutl~

I IS

1
1

Road and Br1d ge
Fund
2,00509
F1re Pro tec t1on
Fund
1,39951
F ederal Revenue
Shanng Fund
2,617 00
Tota l
45,426 10
Transfers In
Gasolme Tax

SERVICES

I

I
I
I

18,800 00

1 i _ H rlp w••Hed

22

Tota l Rece1pt s
and Balances
General FUnd
17 416 52
'Motor Vehrcle
Lteense Tax
Fund
220 1000
Road a nd Brrdg e

Fund
F1rc Prolect•on
Fund

I

Phane _____________

I
I
I

3 200 00

Totai.Rece•pts
General Fund
10 606 38
Motor VehtCie

I
I

Wnte your own ad and order by mall w 1th ln1S
coupon Cancel your ad by Phone w en you ge t
results Money not refundabl e

Prmt one word 1n each
space below Eac h 1n
1t1 al or group of f1gures
counts as a word Count
nam e and adoress or
phone number 1f used
You ' ll get better r esults
1f you descnbe tu l ly,
g1ve pnce The Sentmel
reserves the r1ght to
class1fy, ed1t or re1ect
any ad Your ad will be
pltt
1n th e proper
clas •f 1cat10n 1f you 11
check the proper bo&gt;:
below

30997
14, 134 68

Fund

I11.-------------~-----------.

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

813 64

F re Protectron

Fund

I - - - - - - - ..... - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ;

Pub l iC Not1c e

1SWords or Under
1 diV .1
1 dly$
J dlyl
• dlyl

I
I
1I
1

m n•mum C11h m

I
I

e~rder

~-----------------------J

CUh
I 00
I SO
100
JOO

Chtrgt
1 1J
I tO
JlS
l1J

Etch • orCI over ttle m•n mum 1Swonn 1l 1 ct MIIItr wo r d ptr dty
Ad\ runnong o th e r lhi!M COrlltcut•~t dl y\ wdl bt Ch trfi•d 11 lht 1 citY
fill I t'
tro memory C.lrd

of

• •nk ~

•ncl 011•1Uir r • cerot ,

per ""ord

tl 00

tChllnct

Mob de Home nl" .a net 'f' 1rd Ules tre .!I C(tptro , 11 w It! cun ..w 1th
H ttrlf Chlf!lt lor Ids Clrrr•rg 8 , , '4 u mu n ' " ' Ollllt

Sen••nel

PubliC NOtice
FUnd
l 232 so
Federal Revenue
Shanng Fund
2 375 77
Total
48 223 95
Transfers Out
General Fund
3,000 00
Road and Bndge
Fu nd
200 00
To tal
J 700 00
Balance
Dec 31, 1980
General F und
4,187 73
Motor Veh1cle
License Tax
Fund
I 154 71
Gasolme Tax
7.730 14
FUnd
Road and Bndge
Fund
1.238 35
F1re Protect1on
Fund
1 &lt;~74 70
Federdl Revenue
Shar1 ng Fund
551 20
Tola l
11 ,336 83
CASH BALANCE ,
RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES
BY FUND
General Fund
Balance, Jan I
1980
6,810 14
Rece1pt s
General Property
Tax
Real Estale
and Tratler
(G ross)
2,842 96
T ang•ble Personal
Property Tax
(Gross&gt;
21 J4
Es tale Tax
(G roSS )
359 48
Local Government
and Sta t e lncorne
Tax
3, 295 93
L1quor Perm1 I
Fees
349 55
Cigarette L1 cense
Fees and F tnes
(G ross )
69 60
Other
31667 42
Total Rece1pts
10 606 38
Total Beg1nnmg
Balance Plus
Rcce 1pts
17 416 51
Ex pend 1 tures
To tal Exp Adm
10 308 55
- Jown Hall s
Memor1al Bu1ld1ngs
and Grounds
1 234 62
Cemete r ies
1,508 75
Logh long
111 67
San1 tary
Dump
49 20
Grand Total Exp Genera l Fund
13,228 79
Bal, Dec 31,
1980
4,187 73
Tota l Exp Plu s
Bal Dec 31,
1980
17,416 52
Motor Veh1cle
Lrcense Tax
Fund
Balance, Jan I.
1980
1,083 24
Rece1pts
Motor Veh1cle
L ICense T iJX
9,998 12
Total Beglnn,nq
Balance Plus
Rece1pts
11 ,08136
E xpend1turcs
Total Exp
M !tC
2,25 4 26
Ma1nt
7,672 39
Grand To tal Ex p Molar Vet11cle
L1ccnse Tak
Fund
9 926 65
B(ljance, Dec 31
1980
I, 154 II
l ota l Exp Plu s
Bdl, Dec 31,
1980
11 ,081 36
Gasolme Tax
Fund
Balance Jan 1,
19SO
381000
Recc1pts
Gasot1ne Tax
15,600 00
TrQnsler
J 200 00
Total Re ce1pts
18,800 00
To ta l Beqlnn1ng
Brtlnncl' Plus
Rf'u 1pts
'21,61000
E)Cp~ndllurcs

fotrtl Exp
MI ~C

Mr11nr
Grtlnd Tot ttl Exp
Gaso' 1ne Tr~x
Fund
Balanr e Oc-r 3 I.
1980

9,613 14
10.266 72
1961966
2.730 I o

PubliC Notrce
Toral Exp Plus
Bal , Dec 31
1980
22 ,610 00
Road and Bndge
Fund
Ba la nce Jan 1,
1980
613 64
Recerpts
General Property
Ta&gt;: - Real Estate
and Tra1ler
tGross)
1990 07
T ang10ie Pers
Property
IS 07
Total Recerpfs
2 005 09
Total Beg1nnmg
Balance Plus
Rece1pts
2 818 73
E)Cpend 1tures
Total Ell:p. l,l80 38
F1re Protect1on
Fund
Balance, Jan 1.
1980
1 307 69
Rece1pts
Genera l Property
Tax- Real Estate
and Trailer
(G ross)
1 384 49
Tang1ble Personal
Property TdX
!Gross)
I S 02
Total Rece•pts
1,399 51
Total Beg1nn10g
Balance Plus
Rece 1pts
2.707 20
E xpend1tures
Contracts
1 200 00
Other Expenses
32 50
Tola l Exp
1,232 SO
Bal , Dec 31.
19BO
1,474 70
To tal E xp Plus
Ba l , Dec 31.
1980
2 707 20
Federal Revenue
Sharing Fund
Balance Jan 1
l
1980
J09 97
Rece1pts
Grants Federal
2.611 oo
Total Rece1pts
'1617 00
Total Beg.nn1ng
Balance Plus
Receipts
2,926 97
Expenditures
Mamt and
Operatton
~.J7S n
Total Exp
1,37S 77
Balance, Oec 31,
1980
ss 1 20
Total Exp Plus
Bat , Dec 31,
1980
2,926 97
INTER FUND
TRANSFERS
!OlECONCfl fATtC:.J
From Genera l
Fund to
Gas Tax
Fund
3,000 00
From Road and
Br~dgc toGasoltne
Tax Fund
200 00
Total Exp
Transf ers
3 200 00
Total Rec
Transfers
3,200 00
1319, lie

Public Not1ce
NOTICE FORAPPliCATION
UNDER THE
UNIFORM
DEPOSITORY
ACT OFFICE
OF THE COUNTY
TREASURER
MEIGS COUNTY
POMEROY, OHIO
•
4l769
Appl1catlons Will
be
re ce •ved by
the
un
derstgned at the offi ce of
the Board of Me1gs County
Comm•ssloners, Pomeroy
Oh10, until 12 noon on the
24th day of March, 1981.
and opened and read a/dud
at 'l 30 PM on March 24 ,

ltr81, frorn any f1nan c 1al 1n

st1fut1on lega l ly elig1bl c
wt11ch may des1re to subm1t
a wr 1ften appl1cahon to be
public depOSitOry of the Ac
t1ve and 1nter1m depos1ts of
Public Money s of sa 1d
Board as prOV Ided by tnc
Un1form Depos1tory Act
Section 135 01 et seq of the
Rev1sed Code of Oh10
Sa1d appli catiOn shall be
made m co nform1ty wtth
lhe fo ll owtng resolut1on
pass1ng February 24, 198 1
BE IT RESOLVED !hal
the est1mated aggregate
max1mum amounts of
publ 1c funds subJect to the
control of sard Board to bc
ACT IV E dCPOSifS at nny
11me durmg th e per1od of
des 1 ~nat1on
IS
Thre e
M11 110n F1v e Hundred
Thousand
Dollars
($3,500,000 001
and th e
probabl e
max1mum
amount
of
I NTER I M
depos1ts 1S Two mill 10n ,
F1Ye Hundred Thousand
1$1 500,000 00)
BE
IT
FURTHE
RESOLVED thai bods be
rece1ved until 12 noon on
the 24th day of Marc h, 1981.
and that not1 ce- to all Banks
rn sa1d County and such
other Banks as mily be
necessa r y
be
g1v en
pubhcat 1on as prov1ded by
law Sa•d Board ot County
CommiSS IOne rs reserves
the n9ht to re1 ect any or all
bidS
Awards of the ACTIVE
depos1ts of Publ1c M oneys
subject to the control ot
sa•d Board wdl be rn a de on
March 24, 1981 for a pcnod
of TWO YEARS, co m
menc1ng on the f rrst day of
April 1981 Awards of IN
TERIM depOS itS of PUb liC
Money will be made March
24, 1961, for a per&gt;od oil Ime
prov1ded by tnc County
Treasurer commenc i ng on
the f1rst day of Ap r1 1, 1981
Applrcat1ons should be
sea led and endorsed · Ap
pl1cal1on
under
fhe
Un1form Deposttory Act "
MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS
MARY HOB STETTER,,
CLERK
Ill 2, 9, 16, 23, 4tc
Public Nof1 ce
PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
Th e fo l low1ng persons
were, on the dat es shown ,
appo1n ted to adm1n1sler the
follow1ng
de c edents '
e lates pcndrng 1n th.e
Gigs County Probate

uri

•duclary s Name, Ad
dr ss and Trfle, Date of Ap
po tmcnt
Decede nt s
Na e and Address, (lnd
Cas Number are l1 stcd
L UISC Thompson
547 '
Ma1 Sl , Middleport, Oh 1o '
and Dorotha Neu fz hng
L.nc In HilL Pomeroy ,
Oh1o Co Adrnm1stratrt ccs,
1 28 8 , Olive 1St1bella
Winebrenner
693 iouth
Second, M1ddleport 01. 10
2JJ J7
J B 0 ' Br1cn, IOO'o Court
S1 1eel Pomeroy OhiO, Ad
mln1strator, 2 9 81, Ronald
HMbour, Rt 4 Pomeroy
OhiO 233d3
Bla1nc s Milhoan Rt 1.
L ong
Bottom ,
Oh1o,
E&gt;:ecutor 2 10 81. Glenn1e
S M1lhoan, R D , L ong
Bottom, Oh1o, 23048
Paul E Kloes, R 0,
M1ner~VIIIe,
OhrO
Ad
m•n1strator ,
2 17 81,
Thomas
C
Edwards,
Mmersvlllc, Oh10, 23346

(2) 73, IJ) 2, 9, l i e

Wanted to Buy c la ss r.ngs,
wedd1ng bands. anythmg
stamped lOt&lt; , 14K , or lB K
gold Sliver co1ns, pocket
watches Call Joe Clark at
992 2054 at Clark's Jewelry
Store, Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY OHIO
ESTATE OF SALEM A
YATES . DECEASED
PUBLICATION
OF NOTIC E
TO ALL PERSO N S IN
T E RE STED
IN
THE
ESTATE OF SALEM 1\
YATES
D ECEASED
LATE OF ~lm Stree t,
Rac1ne, Oh10 45771 MEIGS
UNTYPROBATECOURT ,
CASE NO 23364 An op
pl ,ca t10 n has been hkd
ask1ng to rel1eve 111 ~ estate
from
t~dm l n is traii Orl
say1ng that the dSscts do
no exceed S15 000 and the
creditOrS Will bC prCiUdiCCd
thereby A hcM.ng on th t:o
appi1 Cil t10 n Will be held
M ar ch 16, 198 1, at 10 00
o c loc k A M
Persons
knowtng ttny reason Wily
th e appi1 Cdf10n should not
be granted should appenr
and mforrn the Cou rt _ The
Court 1S loca l cd Probate
Court. Mc1gs County Cour
thou se Pomeroy , Oh10
Carolyn G Thomas
Probr1 tc Ctcrk
(3) 9 lt c

3

CHIP WOOD Poles m.n
diameter 14" on largest
end $12 SO per ton Bundled
slab
$10 50 per ton
Delivered to Oh10 Pallet
Co
Rock Spnngs Rd ,
Pomerov 997 26S9
IRON AND BRA SS BEDS
Old furntture , desks, gold
rings,
tewelry,
SiiYer
dollars, sterlmg, etc Wood
Ice boxes, 1ars, ant1ques ,
etc complete households
Wr.te M 0 M1ller, Rf 4,
Pomeroy , OH
45769 Or
call9'12 7760
2 F 70, ld 1n Remmgton
t 1res rn good cond 882 3592
Old or h•stor1cal 1tems
from Me1gs Co
Par
t1cular1y Pomeroy S1gned
stoneware, bot11es , ad
verfls1no. photographs .
tokens,
documents ,
souvenir p1eces, postcards,
etc I'm a collector, not a
dealer Call Bob Roberts
after 5 p m 992 2592

PAY h1qhcst pr1 ces
possible tor gold and silver
coins nngs, I&lt;'WC iry , e tc
Contact Ed Burkett Bc1rbC'r
Shop M 1ddlcport
GU N SHOOf
Club eve ry
Fnday n1g ht startmq at
7 30 p ITl Fa c to ry chokr
quns only
Rac~ne Gun

YOUR

PIANO
Too
to neglect e)(pc rt
tu ni ng &amp; .1nd repr11f Lane
Dan1els 74"J 1'951 or 99?
2082
valuabl~

•

New, used, and antique fur
mture No 1tem to ldrge or
to"small Will buy one p1ece
or complete households
Martm ' s General Store at
992 6370
Now buy1ng gold and
sliver, old pocket watches,
chams, diamonds, silver
money and co ms Martm s
General Store, Middleport
992 6370
Cu1 off saw 992 6035

Rae~n e Volun tee r
F1rc
Departm('n l spon$ors ,,
sho t gun &amp; rif le mf!l ch
every Sat nt g /11 6 30 p rn
at the~r budd•ng 1n Bashan
F ac rorv choke 12 ~ur~qc
shot guns only Open S1t! hts
22 nfle

MEIG S MUSEUM open by
appo1ntnwnt J anuary M&lt;.tr
ch 992 216 4 992 2602 992
2360 or 9YI' 2639 H I~IOfiC(
l or
sale
Pomeroy
Mi ddl eport L 1brarles
LOCKSMITH
Scrv 1C C,
Key1ng,
Com
b1 nat1ons, Bonded Ca 11
New Havt•n , W v.1 004)
882 2079
M.:~ s tcr

APPLES QOidC'IlliC' IICious
$3 75 per bu shel
Other
varu~t1cs c1t $4 00 per bushol
and up Flt.zpMr 1 k Or
Chard St R I 689 PhOni•
669 3785
D£&gt;co rat ed c akes l or .111 oc
caSS IOns ChArddl' r Colk(•S ,
shoet cakes, ilnd wc-(ldmq .
cake s Cr~ll 992 634~ or 99'J
2583
Helen's Beauty Shop rs
proud to announce lhrlt
Gwen Folmer has 1o!ncd
the staff Pleil SC Colli 99?
2890 lor appo1ntment

s4MiSc. Merchan1se
__, _

KIT 'N' CARLYLE '"

GET VALUABLE traon lng
as a young business person
and earn good money ptus
some great gtfts as a Sen
tmel route carrter Phone
us nght away and get on
the ellg1b1 11ty l•st at 992
2156 or 992 2157

12

F~rewood tor
sale Har
dwood, spl1t &amp; delivered
$30 load del1vered 992
5240

II
$185 00 to S500 weekl-y d01 ng
mallmg work . No ex
perumce requrrcd
AP
PLY
C~rcle Sales, PO
Box 224 D, Richmond Hi ll ,
NY 11418
Attractive part t1m e work
for
well
groome-d
h o m e maker ~
who love
pretty tash1ons and want to
keep up on current styles
Average $10 00 per hour
plus free wardrobe tor
tnose
who
qualify
Management oppor tun1ty
open For free lnfomatlon
please phone 992 3941 or
669 &lt;535.

- - - ...-

Car
salesman
Se nd
resume' to Box 179H , c o
The Daily Sent 1nel, Ill
court street, Pomeroy ,
OhiO &lt;5769
Secretary needed for con
struct1on t1cld office Apply
In person to Bob Campbell,
Onlano
Plplng . Second
Street, Ra c me, Oh10 45771
WANTED 3 people to sell
Avon Call 7'-2 2354 or 742
275S

Business Services

•
Good used electnc sewmg
mach me 742 2823

THE DABBLE SHOP
NOW OPEN

L1vlng room su1te. hide a
bed, two chatrs, l1ke new
Drapes, carpet and pad
Ca l l atler 5Jo667 6372

S1tuahons Wanted

TREE TRIMMING and
removal 9d9 2129 or 992
6040

1980 Sears 10 h p 36 mch
nd1ng mower Phone 992
21 17 or 992 2S28 alter 5

HAVE vacancy
Room,
board, laundry for tHe
el der ly 992 6022

DAVID BRICKLE$

CONSTRUCTION

Mon Wed 10 00 9 00
Tues . Fn. Sat.
10 •00 l 00
Closed Thursd01ys
Stop 1n and see our line
ot pla stercraff You can
en1ov maktnQ vour Qtfts
and help ftght m11at10n
located next to Dale
Hill Ford Tractor 1n
Pomeroy
2231mo

1973 26 foot Cru1se a~r
motor home generator A1r
cond1t1oned
390 Ford
motor Call667 6372 afler s

Work 1n dayt1me help1ng
elderly people
Rutland
Pomeroy Mtddleport area
742 2288

•Sodong •Insulation •Roofing •Storm Windows • Concrete work • SeptiC Systems
•Backhoe •Dump Truck- •Remodelmg
•New
constructoon
•Gullering
&amp;
Downspouts

PH. 992-7119
40625 St. Rt. 6Sl

Wilt care for the elderly 1n
our home Women, men, or
couples Tramed and ex
per1enced 992 7314

13

.

-

ousmg
Headquarters

Mower
1- Good Hotpoonl
1- U GE TV

Wa~her

1- I)CU It HOip01nl
I&lt; clrogcrOllor
Shll il lew new l&lt;erownc
He~ len

Sl9

~5

All Ol lh (! iliJOV ('

Phone
1-(614)·9?2-3325

'·
Real Estate

Real Estate

General

HOBSTETTER REALTY

-

--- ~=
31 _..2.,__Homes
tor Sale__

OFFICE 742 2003
George S Hobs tener Jr.
Broker

Beautiful three bedroom
ranch br1ck home m Baum
Add1t1on, Pomeroy , Oh10
Gas heat, central alf c;att
992 2571 or 1 687 6429

J BEDROOM
2 bath,
modern kitChen, 11vmg
room , dm1ng room , offiCe,
full basement, new hea t
system w1th cent ral a1r,
unattached
garage,
2
blocks from school 992
3443
ATTRACTIVE home on
two and one halt acres
Pnvate se ttm g on St R t 7
by Memory Gardens Ter
ms 992 7741
7 rooms &amp; bath , full s1ze at
t1 c, 3 room basement In
Pomer oy ~2 7001
Mob1le Homes
lor Sale

ACREAGE - Appro&gt;: 6
acres w1th lovely home,
1,487 sq ff comfor tabl e
11v1ng 3 bedroom Jl-:..
bath, cen tral a1r, utthty
Askmg S-49 500 Also ap
prox
4 acres w1th
beautiful J bedroom
home bath large llv1ng
room , equ1pped k1tchen
wrap around deCking
over double garage and
large workshop Ask.ng
$46,500 oo Or buy bolh
homes and 10 acres tor
$87 500 00
NEW HOME
3
bedroom liv 1ng room
dtn1ng k1tchen comb
bath ,Uflllty, carpQr l on
laqrge cor ner lot Ask
1ng S41 000 00
LAND CONTRACT ~
Large two story home
on fron t street Owner
w111 t 1nance at 10%
G•ve us a call We have
several land Contract
propertiCs
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc
Phone742· l171
velma N1cmsky, Assoc
Phone 742 30'2

:==========!..!

bedrooms
Cameron new
12 carpet
x 60 1976
two+-1
bedrooms, all elec tn c 1971
Skylme, 12 sx 6l
two
bedrooms, bafh &amp; 1.1, new
ca r pet
1970
PMC
12 x 60. two bedrooms new
carpet B x s Sales 1nc ,
2nd &gt;-. V1and Street Pomt
Plet1sant, WV Phone 675
4424

t l l..'m&gt;

n el

ccl l11 nl condll10n All ;uc pnccd
to ~e ll ommcdu1tet~ Set u~ lo

WELL PLANNED - 8
rm frame home 1620
sq ft and large lot
l 44x220, has 2 tub baths,
nat gas furnace w1th at
t ached wood burner full
basement and 2 car
garage on State Rt near
stores and sc hools
NEW LISTING 7
ac r es
1n
Rutland
Townsh1p Has old gas
wvll, Lead1ng Ck water
and a smal house for on
ly 111.500
NEW LISTING 21
acres .n Olive Twnshp
on good State R t Lots of
locust a nt;1 m1nera1s
leased Ask1ng $15 000
LOOKS NEW - and ou st
nght for a fam11y Cha1n
li nk fence. alu m1num
s1d1ng 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, nat gas furnace,
dnlled well, T P water
available N1ce and nea l
large yard Only $31 ,000
IDEAl FOR YOU - In
good repair older home
w1th car pet1ng, nat gas
furnace, 3 bedrooms
storm drs and Windows,
garage and all CIIY
ut1 l tt1 es Out of flood
$27 500
THERE'S NOTHING
LIKE HOME OWNER·
SHIP WE CAN HELP
YOU GET IT CALL
991 1325 or 992 3876

Housing
Headquarters·

Slimming Stripes

"'"

POMEROY

~LANDMARK
.,_DMMII

E Mam St

41

Regtstered four vear old
wh1te male toy pood le
Proven for st ud $150 00
Reg1stered toy apr 1co t
pood le for stud serv ice
$50 00 Caft Coolville 667
39 15

Call742·3195
or 992-7680
2 8 lie

KAUFPS
PLUMBING
AND
HEATING

Farm S!!IJPIIes===
&amp;

Li•.oestae!E=

__ livestock

Two large mare pon1eS, one
pinto, one bay Seven mon
t h old t111y, t hree fourth s
appolossa l ead broke and
gentl e N 1ne year old ap
paloosa mare due to foa l .n
August Neck re.ns and IS
gentle S600 00 Call 985
3891

GRAVEL'I' - Willh
ndmy tr&lt;tctors

beh1nd

Push

&amp;
pro

mowers

SNAPPER - Push 8

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE
-Auto and Truck
Repaor
- Transmossoon
Repaor

se ll pro

mowen ndmq lr&lt;tclur~
A

I LAS - rtlllilrS

WEED E ATE

R - Bru~h

cutler

&amp;

lnmmc n

s ri HL -

8 rus h

cuners

&amp; l rt m

mcrs

Hrs Mon ·Fn
9 A M .· 5 30 PM

YAlOO - H, whee l mowers

wese rvoce whalwl! sell•
Sm,111 Engoncs- Ou r Spec o.111 'f
'104 Condor Sl
Pomcrov Oh
PH 'ln ?~JS
J5

992-5682
10 7 lie

I mo

H&amp;R BODY SHOP
Body Reparr Insurance
work· Colllsron Reptur
Expert pa1ntmg, body
work , pm str1p1n g &amp;
vmyl tops
Free Est1miltes
Call992 3421
Kmgsbury Rd, 2 rnt
west Co Rd 18
Pomeroy,Oh 45769
Oomest1 c, Japanese &amp;
European
CtHS
&amp;
Trucks
2 1511110

• Backhoe
• Excavatmg
• Septic Systems
ewa ter, Sewer &amp; Gas
Lmes
Ltc~n sed &amp; Bonded

DUMP TRUCK
Ph. 992-7201
3 5 1 mo

3 2 1 mo

ALLSTEEL

sel l

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

12 Park St.
Moddleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-6263
Anytime

One black angus bul l ap
proximately 450 pounds,
one black angus he1fer 700
pounds open, one black
w1th wh 1te fa ce he11er, 700
pounds open
A II 3 for
$1100 00
or woil sell
separately
See Gordon
Profhtt at Portland Oh10

&amp;

J

r&lt;t.;
4·
~

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

Farm Buildings
S11es
''From30)CJQ"
SMALL

I

t
\'
J
r \

-

_ ,

Utility Buildings

---

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Two
bedroom
mob1le
hom e
completely fur
n1shed Depos11 requtred
Adults preferred 992 2749

TRAILER LOT tor sa le,
$4 ,000 00 992 2571

1 bedroom Mob1 le Home

Adults
only
Brown s
Trailer Court M1nersvil le
992 3324

Rea l Estate - General
- - ----

.,

-

T hree b edroom mobile
home , near Chesh rr e
$175 00 per month, $50 00
depOSit 367 7811
Apartment
tor
3 AND 4 RM tur n1s hed ap
ts Phone 992 5434

Ren."'- - -

POMEROY, 0 .
992 -2259

.

·unfurnished one bedroom
apartment for rent Ren
tcrs ass1stance ava1lable
lor sen 1or c 1t1zens Contact
Village Manor Apartments
at 992 7767

No flldller what lhl! Wl!d ther

Two or three bedroom fur
n• s he d or unfurnrshed
apartment, located 1n th e
warner Bu1ld10g, at 117
West
Second
Str ee t .
Pomeroy, Oh 10 992 2117 or
992 2528 i"lfler 5

Allee Brooks
Needlecro« Dept

45

The Daoly Sentinel
Bor 163, Old Chelm Sll, New
Yorl, NY !0113 Pr~nt Nome,
Address, Z1p Pallern Number
Catch onto I he Clilll boom' Sen d
l ooouo NEW1981 NEEDLlCRAfT
CA1AL0G Ovet 172 deSIRII S J
l 1ee pa1Je1ns 1r1stde Sl 00

ALL CRAFT IIOO«S $1 H e&gt;&lt;h
134 14 Qu&gt;cl Ma&lt;h&gt;ne Quoits
131 hshton Home Qu&gt;il&gt;ni
132 Quoit Onitnals
Ill Add a Blocl Quoits
130 Swtaterfash&gt;OIIs Stzts l8 56
129 QuiCI 'n' Eas1 T11nslt1S
121 (n,.Jope Palchworl Quoits

121 Atchans 'n' Doiloes
126 Th11lly CIIIIJ Flowm
m Pelal ~&gt;lis
124 hs1 G&gt;lts n Ool1itments
12l Sl&gt;t&lt;h 'n ht&lt;h Quilts

122 Stull 'n' Puff Quilts
120 CIO&lt;hei Your W11diobe
119 hs1 A1l of Flowoo Coochet
116 Ntlt! FIIIJ Qu&gt;lts

I a hSJ Ail of I!Ipple Crochel
Ill Compfele Gilt Book

I(J9.S.W + Knoi(IIask llssue ond)

lOSinstont C1ochet

Museum Qu1lts
101 Qu&gt;ll Book Collecllon 1
102

Four room apartment tor
ren J 992 5908

Fui."!.sh~ Rooms

Sleep1ng room s, by th e
week
K1tchen ,
and
tel eviSIOn lounge Carryout
store and rest aurant w1th1n
500 leel 992 6370
46

Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park , Route 33, Nor th of
Pomeroy Large , lots Cit 11
997 7479
TRAILER spaces tor renl
Sou th ern Va l ley Mobil e
Home Park, Chesh.re, Oh
997 3954

.

53

Antiqu es
~

ATTENTION
(IM
PORTANT TO YOU) W.OI
pay cas h or ccrt1 IICd ch eck
fo r &lt;Jn !1Ques and co llec
ltbl es or en t1n~ estates
Noth1ng l eo l argr. Also ,
guns, pockcf w?~tches and
corn co llections Ca ll 614
767 3167 or S57 341 1

, Shorl G "nP
~~~~11111\1!

- ' --

(ftopptnn

• I' UI! uq &amp;

• Golll.e n on•

weo11rr

F ~t

too

l ~r 1~111

01N l

All A"" '

r1u 1 h

h H&lt;O I~

lnd

•hot' D••n&lt;111•m~\l ~l
llROWNIWG

Wor~

l o, hn&lt;tbDOh

A &gt; oPo~~h uq o •l

~n!l 1 o&lt;tq

11q

~~~~

h u tlll!&lt;~ ~

c&gt;&lt;uo l

' h~~'

w ~ ~l•oc.rrv 1 &lt;omph!
111 a ll &lt;h o'&lt; l!
on&lt;l ~l){)rlo119 GO~O ~

DENNEY
CHAIN LINK
FENCE

1977 Ford Granada 6 cy l 1n
der, 3 speed , overdr1v e
742 7451
1975 Mercury Marqu 1s two
door, tov.. m11eage , ex
ce llcnt cond1t1on $1600 00
firm 742 273 4
1972 Ford Galax 1e 500 fou r
door
at r
cond1 110n1 ng,
power s1eerong, on ex
ce llen t cohdil1on $395 00
Phone 742 3010 or Ct1n see

Free Eshmales

73

Home
Improvements

Gene's Carpe l Clean1ng
deep stream extract1on
Fre e
es t11n11t ed
reasonable
roles
scot
chquarcr: 992 6309 or 742
22 11
WILL DO ALL k1ndsot cur
penlry work , mclud 1ng
panc11ng, CPIImgs r epa~r s
etc
Expenence d
With
reterences Phone992 3941
Will do carpenter work and
mtenor or extenor p a 1n
tlng Free es 11mates CALL
9'n6 190or9t194!614
REMODEL I N G
doors
pancl1ng , ce 111no t11 e,
floors, s1d 1ng &amp; prll nt,ng 25
years exper•c ncc 9fl'l 2751J

ELECTRICAL
SUPPLIES
ReSidCIIIicll &amp; l1ght
Commerc1a 1 E l ec tflcill
~:;. ophes
Quality Produc1s
Reasonable Pnces

JOYCE ELECTRICAL
SUPPLIES
College Rd
Sy r o1C USe,
Oh
Ph 992 3804
223 lmo

Plumb1ng
&amp; Heatmg

WATER
WEL~S
Domest1c and commerc1al,
pump sales and scrv1ce
Tom
Lew1s
Dr ill1 ng
Scasonut d1scount on pum
ps 1 304 895 3802 or I 304
895 3641

E)(c,watmg
83
COMPLETE
sever 1n
sta llatr on &amp; back hoe scr
vrce for Ra c 1ne SyracusP.
sewer cllstn ct Dozer work
1f needed 949 2293
Dozer work Sma ll 10bs a
spec 1alty 742 2753

a4

Electncal
R•• fl igcrahon

EL WO QD
BOW E RS
REPAIR
s weepers ,
toast er s, 1rons, all small
applian ces Lawn mower
Next to Star e H1ghway
Gar aq c on Route 7 985
3625

HART'S

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

TRASH HAULING
Bedford Township
and
Flatwoods Area
$5 00 Per Month
weekly Pickup

• New Homes - extensove remodelong
• Electncal work
• Roofong work
12 years
Expenence
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

I

(4 Bilgs L1m1t Per Wc eiO ,
PHONE 992 780?
or 992 7443
2 13 1 m o

2 23 l mo

84

E leclnca t

8S

!. R~ri_g !_fat~o!!_ _

SEW IN G

MACHINE
se r v1ce.
all
makes1
992 2'284
The
Fabr1c
Shop, Pomeroy
Author~zed
Smger Sales
and Serv 1ce We s harpen
Sc1Ssors
R e pa~r s,

Rutland

General Hauling

J&amp;C San 1tal10n ServteiJ
Trash p1ckup ava11.~bl e 111
Village of M1dd l cpor t
Phone 992 5016 or 992 7597
anyt1me

Furn~ure

Carpet Shop

· SPRING CARPET SALE
cash 'n' Carry

KITCHEN
CARPET

CARPET
ITH PADDING

From

'7.99 &amp; up
Install ed

~

Frenc h City Pr11n11ny
Res1 clcn tl cll
comm1 •1u al,
1nt er 1ar
o xtcflor
SpcCii!I11 111Q
111
tnt('fiOr
pi11 nt1n-;.1 papt' hflng ng &amp;
tc)l;fure d
ccd1ng5
F1 f'C
CStlfn,lt~S J67 llv I Ci t Jb/
/ 160

VA 1o.1ns 110 money down
Feder&lt;~ I Hou smg 3oo on $7 S 000
5° a on bOli &lt;HlCC
conve nt1 0111 1L oln ., 5t.1()
down
Call lor 111101 m;, f,on
992 7 5~&lt;1
121t 1c

~~==~~~~~~~~~~~==================~~==============~~~

82
81

Mortgag e Bankers
992 -7544

Free Eshm.ltes
Reasonable Pnn•s
C&lt;~ll Howard
949 2862
949 2160
2 4 tt c

219ffc

1978 Ford F250 4 wheel
dnve super ca b dll ex tra s.
good cond 7 47 2068

1978 4/0 H ~OI"d Thun
derb1rd
motor , 16 000
miles $-125 oo. Phone! 667
6372 after 5

CUNNINGHAM
&amp; ASSOC.

A 11 types at root work,
new or rep.ltr gutters
and down spouts, gutter
I ng
cl enn1ng iHld Pilln 1
All work guilrflnteed

245 -9113

Vans &amp; 4 W 0

Auto P.uts
&amp; Acccssone s

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

KEN SOLES

Trucks tor Sale
~
onLead•ngCreekRoad
1976 Chevy p 1ckup Will sell
or trade for van ot equa l
value 992 7453

16

you II look good 111 th1s vesl
l1ght sluntmngl Crochet smart
vesl ol lwo ~ ~r~nd s at bedsp re ad
co tt on •n ve1\1C.!f stnped des1gn
of v s11tches and shells 111m
w1th conllasf fldltern 72 54
Wam e11 s S 1 1tl ~ 38 44 mchl(led
$2 00 101 eoch patle&gt;n Aild 501
each pattern tor f11SI c la~s au
mall and h.1ndl1ng Send to

KLUB

!(ouiC.&gt;n11&gt;W d
C~ II CI Oh

~-

lo r mal

12

44

i

G &lt;en&gt; Now

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Houses for Rent

•

THE
KOUNTRY

;, Jr,!1l~

S1x room house and bath
wllh ut 11it y room
C1ty
water t1nd gas SI SOOO per
month w•th S50 00 depos1t
Loca ted on Nye Ave Call
367 78 11

~creage

At.-,, tOll

Let George M1ller check
your present electncal
syst em
Res1dent1al
&amp; Commercral

Reg1stered trarned walker
18 months old $75 992 7001

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

Sue!'i from 4d to 12x40

1975 VIKING Mob ole Hom e,
12x65 m excellen t con
d1t1on, underp,nn.ng 1n
eluded S5500 00 247 3942

m

For a II of your wirong needs.

Rentals

1969 PMC J bedroom
frail er 12x60 992 3954

NEW LISTING - 1 25
acre lriHier S1 fc1n
Sou th ern 01 Sfrlct Ha s a
dnveway and 1S land
scaped to ctecommoda te
a mobtl e home JUST 1
$3 ,500
ALEXANDER SCHOOL
DISTRICT - A bog )
room home w1fh 4
bedrooms equ,pped k1t
chen enc losed porch, 3
storage bu1ld1ngs and 4
b 1g
l ots
Re ce ntly
remodeled
ONLY 1
$26,900
A NICE STREET IN
MIDDLEPORT - IS the
perfect pl ace for a fam 1
ly and th1s two story
house w1fh a tull base
ment has lots of room II
has a large kitchen with
lots of storage, a d.n1ng
room and 3 bedrooms
House IS m exce llen t
co ndlllon $42 ,600
PRETTY
BACK
YA~ D• And a one floor
plan hou se w1th 3
bedrooms Has a full
basement and a screen
ed In porch Needs some
work ASKING$27,000
A REAL BARGAIN! This 2 bedroom home
co m es w11h an eQutpped
kitchen, front porch,
d1nmg room and Is rn
pretty good condI tio n
JUST I $11,000
REAL TOR
Henry E Cleland, Jr
992 6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trusse11949 2660
Roger &amp; Oofl1e Turner
992-5692
OFFICE 992 22l9

MILLER ELECTRIC
SERVICE

992 2181
Pomeroy

Pets for Sale

56

63

•

water sewer E lectnc
Gas L1ne D•tches
water Line Hook ups
SeptiC Tanks
county Certd1ed
Roush Lilne
Cheshlfe, Oh
Ph 367 7S60
1 7 ti c

All Models
Avatlable
LEO MORRIS
Rt 1 Stde H1ll Rd
Rutland, Ot)
2 9 tfc

New Ool S.c C loscout
Save
S1)0 00

SEVERAL cho1ce build1ng
lots, Eastern D1stnct,Tup
pers Pla 1ns Chester water
Owner will help f1nance
9'17 S869

Wanted to Do

Lots_!.

d!1J/

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

Real Estate- General

1 Only

===-

1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65,
three bed1ooms new ca r
pet 1971 Cameron, 14 x 64
two bedrooms, new ca rpet
1972 Champ1on. 12 x 60, two

_

Acreage One acre and one
half of ground located bet
ween old Rt 33 and new Rt
33
fa c rn g th e Metgs
Fa1rgrounds S4000 00 992
2571

Insurance

Furnace repa1rs , electnca l
work, p1umb1n g, mob1le
home or res1dence 992
585S

32

-~l_~.fs &amp; A~n~a ge

lS

AUTOMOBILE
IN
su RANCE been can
celled'&gt;
Lost
your
operator 's l1cense' Phone
992 2143
18

2 1J imQpd

ARD
AVA TORS

W111 do wallpapenng 992
3760

JS

Announcements

RACINE

-- -

_ Wanted .!_o Bu y__

OLD COl NS. pockel wal
ches, c lass nngs, weddmg
bands, d1amonds Gold or
silver Call J A Wamsley
Treasure Chest Co1n Shop,
Athens, OH 594 4221

PubliC Nolicc

Public NOfiC C

- -- -

WANTED
TO
BUY
GOLD ,
SILVER
PLATINUM, STER LING
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR
Y, Ml SC
IT EMS
AB
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED ED
BURK ETT
' BARBER
SHOP . MIDDLEPORT
OH 10 992 3476

wmd and wute1 upon scmdslunc. tncludong 278-foot·long Ra onbow
Bradge,

lost and Found

FOUND 1 female boxer,
brown m color Humane
SOC iety, 992 6260

dod report that there IS an oogamzed
group m each county workmg on the
abuse problem
Announced at the meetong was
State Legoslallve Day, March 25 m
Colwnbus. the Ohoo State Dovoswn
annual meetmg, Apnl 24-26 m
Columbus, and the Amencan
ASsoctatJon of Umverstty Women's
centenmal celebratoon to take place
In Boston, Jw1c 21-25 Forms for
reg1strat10n were m the December
ossue of the bullet on and woll be m the
January/February ossue of
Graduate Women

bndges formed by the

Giveawa

BRITTANY Span1el , 18
months old, male, mother
&amp; father reg1stered Puppy
not regiStered but full
blOOded To gOOd home In
country 992 3694

-'Abuse' topic of program

Inn

Wanted

LADY or g1r1 to l•ve 1n 992
2686

'

' Facmg the Problem of Abuse'
was the program top1c presented by
Mrs Ellen Bell at a recent meetmg
of the Middleport-Pomeroy Area
Branch of the Amen can Assoc1atoon
of Umvers1ty Women at the Meogs

The Daol
1~1_ _-'H el

From

12.95 &amp; up

1

Installed

2Holl s
Rubber B.1ck

SHAG

Reg S159S

$799

Sq.
Yd.

Ci1sh n Carry

Buy Now &amp; Save $2 $6 Per Yard .
,
25 rolls rarpet on stock to pock from. •
Regular backed carpel 111slalled free, .
woth pad .
Drove A Lotlle - Save A Lot

RUTLAND FURNITURE

MaonSI.

7422211

I
'

�Monday, March 9, 1981

Meigs County. happenings.

•
I

, Voi.29, No. 227
Co rtghlecll911

ELBERFELD$

HONORED - Charles W. Black, Hartford, W. Va.,
center, was honored Friday evening at the Midwest
Steel Division inPomeroy upon his retirement Black ·
who is also mayor of Hartford was presented with a
cake made In the replica of a planer and gifts from
Tom Serey, left, plant manager, and Brent Manley,

right, union steward, on behalf of the cqmpany and the
union, respectively, Black began hts employment with
Midwest Steel In Joe, 1967. He bas worked in ihe
maintenance department, has operated the radial
drill, the multiple spindle drill and the planer.

'

Sylvia 0 . Richards, 61, New
Haven, died Sunday in Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
She was born Oct.!, 1919 in Logan
County, West Virginia, to the ·late
Hiram A. a nd Mabel E. Elkins
Richardson.
. She was a cafeteria worker at
Phillip Sporn.
Surviving are her husband, Orva
J . Richards, three sons, James,
Dani el and Timothy all of
Sacra mento, Ca lifornia; tw o
daughters, Mrs. Tamrni L. Duncan
of Letart and Mrs. Tereasa C.
Rickard of Point Pleasa nt ; three
sisters, Mrs. Martha Hart of Letart ;
Mrs. Ula Ashton of McConnelsville,
0 ., and Mrs. Goldie Love of Colwnbus: three brothers, Delbert Richardson of Franklin Furnace, Hiram
Richardson, Jr. of Colwnbus and
David Richardson of New Haven.
There are also nine g,randchildren.
Funeral services will be held at
1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the New
Haven United Methodist C~ u rc h
with Rev . John Campbell officiating.
Burial will be in Union Cemetery.
Friends may call at Foglesong
Funeral Home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
Tuesday. The body will lie in state at
the church one hour prior to the service .

Elsa Baer Kimes
Elsa Baer Kimes, 88, formerly of
Middleport, died Saturday at the

1__.Jc

Kimes Convalescent Center in
Athens following a lingering illness.
Mrs. Kimes was born Jan. 2, 1893
in Chester Township, a daughter of
the late Sebastian and Elizabeth
Stahl Baer . She was also preceded in
death by her husband, Cecil R.
Kimes in 1963, two sisters, Rose
Hearn and Cora Johnson and two
brothers, Henry and Otho Baer.
Surviving are a sister, Mrs. Fran·

ces Jarrett. Charleston, W. Va ., and
several nieces and nephews.
Mrs. Kimes was a school teacher
for a number of years. She attended
the First United Presbyterian Church in Middleport. ·
Funeral services will he held at I
p.m. Tuesday at · the RawlingsCoats-Blower Funeral Home with
Mr. Ron Moyer officiating. Burial
will be in the West Union Cemetery ,
Athens. Friends may call at the
funeral home anytime today. Serving as pallbearers will he Paul
Baer, Herman Ca rson, J ohn
Wickham, Willoughby Hill , Howard
Wolfe and Carl Platter.
WARN VANDALS
Vandalism on the parking lots and
to parking meters and at the minipark must be stopped inuned.iately,
Mayor Clarence Andrews warned
today. If vandalism does not stop, a 9
p.m . curfew will be invoked , the
mayor warns. Parents are held
responsible for acts of vandalism by
minors.

Charges of criminal mischief have
been filed aga inst 22-year old Ted
Coppick, Portland, according to
Meigs County Sheriff James J . Prof~
fitt.
According to the report Coppick at
approximately .2:30 a.m. Sunday
was driving and cutting donuts in a
field and ballfield at Portland
Elementary School and upon leaving
he drove across the front lawn at the
school.
Coppick injured his wrist when the
steering wheel whirled around as he
was driving across the ballfield.
Coppick is currently lodged in Middleport Jail on a charge of driving
whileintoxicated.
Bill Simpkins, West Columbia,
reported that he a CBradio stolen
from his vehicle that was parked at

~J"

'

I,. '

!, . ...... .

.. ...1. . . . .., ..
" · ,.- &amp;t J ·~· , • .._
•WII'"" '' ' '~ 'MII-'"

L1

'

:,

·
ByBOBHOEFLICH
: Pomeroy Vlllage was given
;another year to develop the former
i?Omeroy Senior High School into a
~age hall by tbe Meigs Local
;Board of Education Monday night.
: Meeting with the board represen~ Pomeroy Village were council
members Larry Wehrung, Mrs. Bet)lY Baronlck and John Anderson .
iW~hrung, speaking lor the village,
~d the town has been given a
172,000 grant with which to Winterize
~ senior high building and has ap-plied for a $100,000 loan from the
FHA whtch would be used to
~ejuvenate· the structure conve'rting
it to a village ball.
; The present agreement between
lhe board of education and Pomeroy
YillageexplresMay II. According to
. ,lhat agreement, the senior high
building was to have been turned
back to the board of education if the
village hall · facility were not
developed. , However, the board
agreed to elllend lbe agreement for
one year--to May II, 19112-slnce the
town is making progress in the
projecl
SHORT SESSION
During the relative short meeting,
the Meigs Board also granted sick
leave to Mrs. Victoria Bwnpass arxl
employed Charles E. Wilson as an
assistant boys track coach with no
salary involved.
Kim Grueser was employed as the
girls reserve softball coach and
Harry Yarbrough, welding in, structor, was given an extension to a
leave of absence. Daniel Nonnan
was named a substitute custodian

JM

...
•

Judge Bacon ordered a presentence inv estiga tion to be conducted by the state parole office.
The defendij nts were released from
custody on their own recognizance.
Most of the stolen items were
receovered.

Ctt , .•

'

'j'--.,_

Portland man faces ~barges

Area deaths
Sylvia 0. Richards

Sa turday Disc harges--Garland .
Davis, Pa uline Taylor, Bobby Roy,
Rosalinde Rouge, Jessica Sayre.
Sunday Admissions-Edson Hart,
Pomeroy: Goldie Lynch , Athens;
Thelma Capehart, New Haven;
Thelma Johnson, Middleport; Glen
Jewell, Albany; Janet Sipnan, Middleport : Kimberly Riffle, Syracuse.
Sunday Discharges--Jolmny M0Cioud, Winnie Dailey, Judy Stiltman, Clarence Longstreth.

·'

'il"-

f· "-

Nyl on

we shapes the most wearable jacket in the world
•

- Le Trgre"' by Campus . • o l course. You 'l l fin d a
multrtude of us es for lhrs funcJronal , ligh tweigh t wa\er proof jacket - rt 's pac kable and super-looking as wel l.
The pri ce is a most s urprising ly Jaw $19.95. Have
se ver a l! - th ey m a ke great gifts as well!
Be sure to see all the other styles men ' s and boys '
lightweight jackets - 1st floor .

evening. l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~P~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~J

The incident is under investigation.
the Skate-A-Way Saturday
In other action, Boyd C. Spurlock,
Jr., 16, Tuppers Plains, and 19 year
old Joe L. Wilson, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
appeared Saturday morning in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
on a bill of infonnation charging
them with the March 3, breaking and
entering of Hawk 's Pennzoil at Tuppers Plains.
After being informed :Jlf their
rights by Common Pleas.Judge John
C. Bacon the pa:r entertd guilty
pleas.
'
GETS REPAIRS
The Meigs County Bookmobile is
at Gibson Motor City at Athens and
will not be making rounds to various
points of the county today or
Tuesday.

. .

TUESDAY
NIGHT,
SOUTHERN

Polish workers strike again

We Reserve the llfloht to
Limit QuCMt/tles

WARSAW, Poland - An estimated 500,000 Polish workers held a
one-hour warning strike today in the central province of Lodz after
last-minute talks between government and independent union leaders
broke down.
Workers placed red and white Polish flags around the provincial
capital of Lodz - the nation's second largest city - and factory sirens
wailed as the first major strike in Poland In three weeks got under
way.
Jeny Kroplwnlckl, leader of the Lodz branch of Solidarity, said
workers from 1,300 plants took part in the strike from 10 a.m. to 11
a.m., but that health and social services, schools and utillties were excluded.

Open M-S, 9-7
&amp; Pearl, Racine, Ohio
Boneless Chuck

HAM

Frankies

STEAKS

PORK
LIVER

'109

Representatives stage walkout
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Business service representatives at Ohio Bell
Telephone Co. staged an unauthorized strike today at two downtown
locations.
The walkout, which began Monday, was triggered when the company 8llked representatives to explain and sell a new switchboard
telephone system designed for small business customers, accrording
to Ohio Bell spokesman Tom Lindeman.
· '
Lindeman said Ohio Bell asked the representatives to explain the
new systems to customers calling into the office, whereas marketing
employees usually go out on sales calls.

Brand New CoHee From Europel
A Blend of CoHees Carefully Selected From
Around The Worldl

GRANDOS INSTANT COFFEE
VAN CAMP'S

BEANEE
WEENEE

Your Community

O~ned

Bank.

7 3/4 OZ.

Apprehend four in drug raid

SKEnEE
WEENEE
~· .

2 LB. HUNGRY JACK COMPLETE

PANCAKE
MIX
14 oz.

•

GALA

·, PAPER 79~
99 ~ i _,:~ TOWELS Per Roll

AJAX3l' 1 00

14

CORN

GREEN BEANS

Mt•mbt•r I'DlC

nch

STONE
GROUND

WHEAT

BREAD

2ooz .

79e

(

Preliminary government figures show the most fatal underground
coal mine accidents last year occurred In West Virginia, Kentucky,
Pennsylvania, VIrginia and Illlnols.
During 1~. 129 miners died in accidents In deep arxl surface mines
and preparation plants in the county, according to statistics from the
U.S. Mine Safety and Health Administration.
There were 33 coalfield deaths in West Virginia - 29 In underground
mines and two each In surface mines and preparation plants.

Winning Ohio lottery number

3
Hearth __Farm

VANDAUA, Ohio - Four people were apprehended Monday in a
drug raid that netted about $500,000 in cocaine and $2'1 ,000 in cash, say
Montgomery County officials.
Charged with aggravated drug trafficking were Michael T. Grillot,
33, of Osgood; Mlcbael E. Williams, 29, of Piqua ; Robert A. Olding, 20,
of Sidney; and CarolS. Chishom, 31 , of Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Bond
was set at $500,000 for Grillot and $200,000 apiece for the others.

129 died in mine accidents

oz. DEL HAVEN
Del Haven

49e

l

CATSUP 3/' 1 00

CLEANSER

CELERY

Farmers
Bank

'3

59

'

With a NOW Account
at the Farmers Bank,
•
you can earn Interest
on yo~r checking
account.

and the resignation of Joe Jacks was
accepted as a custodian.
The board approved professional
leave for staff members including
Charles Frecker, Ben Slawter, Bennita King, Lynn Lovdal, John
Redovian, Ed Harkless, Ron Logan,
John Blaettnar and Karen Walker.
The board authorized lbe attendance
of the Meigs Vocal Choir to West
Liberty State College for a festival.
Feb. 12 was approved as a
calamity day and a special meeting
of the board was set for March 30,
7:30p.m. to adopt an appropriation
measure and consider administrators' contracts. The board
agreed on the use of the school
facilities for the Pomeroy Youth
Baseball League and approved
repair of a school bus by Smith's
Body Shop.
The board approved a trip to
Washington, D. C., by the Pomeroy
Elementary School Safety Patron In
May and agreed that employes who
have been on the same job for 60
days in the district will in the future
will have fringe benefits as provided
by state law.
The board then moved Into
executive session to discuss the
evaluation of Supt. David L. Gleason
and the explusion of a student.
The lour members of the board
present for the meeting, Robert
Snowden, Larry Powell, Dr. Keith
Riggs and Carol Pierce voted
unanimously on all actions taken at
last night's meeting. They accepted
the financial reports of Treasurer
Jane Wagner.

GOOD LUCK!

Superior ·

Valley Bell

17 01· Mrs. Smith's

BUTIERMILK

PIE
CRUSTS
99~

'lz GAL

2 Sections, 14 Pages 1S C•nts
A Mul'timedil Inc. News

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 10, 1981

'

~
r[-,J-' '/ Jf-;

Style # 7900

Haven.

en tine

at

Meigs board
~xtends deal

HO~PIT-\L ~E\\ ~
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admissions--Charles
Knapp, Mason; Jessica Sayre,
Syracuse; Chester Foutley, Long
Bottom: Berni ce Grueser, Middleport ; Johnny McCloud, New

e

•

NEED APPLICANTS
The Middleport Recreation Committee is accepting applications for
the positions of park director, swimming instructor, and lifeguards.
Applications can be picked up at
the office of Mayor. Fred Hoffman.
They should be returned by Apri1 2.

SPECIAL MEETING
. KEYSFOUND
There will be a special meeting of
A set of keys has been found in the
Middleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, title office at the Meigs County CourTuesday, March 10, at 7 p.m. Work thouse.
in fellow craft degree . All members
Anyone having lost of set of keys
should
check with the office and
are asked to att~~d.
make proper identification.

•

Ohto Lottery's dally game "The Nwnber" Is 734.
The lottery reported earnings of $499,776.50 from the wagering on
the drawing. Lottery officials said sales prior to the drawing totaled
$975,479.50, and holders of winning tickets are entitled to share
$475,703.

Weather
M011tly cloudy tonight with chance of snow flurries. Lows In upper
201. M011tly cloudy Wednesday with highs In the low to mid-408. Chance
of precipitation 30 percent tonight and 20 percent Wednesday. Winds
westerly f&gt;-10 mph tonight.
Extended Ohto Forecut- .
TIIUI'IdaY lhroup Satunlay:
Fair TlnJncllly. Achance ol ohowen Friday with mixed showen and
IDOW fturrtea ea1tern HCIIODI Saturday. IIIJbiiD the 601. Overnight
!oWl from lbe upper ZGI to mid-3011.

SP"LLING BEE CHAMPION
AND RUNNERUP-Tammy Landen, Meigs Junior Hlgb student,
center, was the winner of tbe Meigs
Counly Spelling Bee held Monday
nigbt at Southern High school. RUJ&gt;o
nemp was David Beegle, right, who
-nt down on the word "oddment".
Tammy opelled oddment correctly
and lbe next word, odorleos to
become the champion. On the left is
Grella Saute, Meigs Counly Supervisor, who presented each wtth a
trophy. T•mmy was also presented
lbe traveling plaque lor her achool.
Pronouncer wu Daisy Franz,
teacher at Southern High School.
Judges were Richard Roberta,
Superintendent of Eastern Local
School&amp;, Martha Veonarl, cOIIDIIelor
at Meigs High School and Bob Ord,
superintendent of Southern Local "
School Dislrtct.
Flllallsll (shown In lop photo) In the
Meigs County Spelltng Bee were,
front row, 1-r, Gary Curtis, Beth
Berkblmer, Travis Newlun, Brian
Rutherford, Jeffrey Arnold, Lesley
Carr and Kimberly Hamm; back,
Usa Miller, Erin Anderson, Rickey
Sellen, Karla Smtih, Leglaa Hart,
Lori Adams and Wendy Fry_ Absent
was Jeff Nelaon.

Md~s Jr. Ht

Salisbury
,_,

. _j

" ~·~

Severance
tax
hikes
will
refurbish
'
deficit-ridden black lung program
WASIDNGTON (AP) - The
Reagan administration, insisting it
won't cut payments to black lung
~ictims, says it will rely heavily on
mcreased coal mdustry severance
taxes to return tbe deficit-ridden
disability program to sound footing .
The only question remaining is
· how much of a tax increase should
he assessed against the nation's coal
companies, a hig~ranking Labor
Department official said Monday.
The official, whO declined to be
named publlcly, said the departmen! and the Office of Management
and Budget are in basic agreement
on the need for higher levies. But he
said both are concerned about the inflationary impact such action might
have.
The industry now pays a 5tkent-aton tax on underground coal and a
25-cent-a-ton tax on surface-mined
coal into the Blac~ Lung Disability
Trust Fund, which the administration says will he $1.5 billion
in the red by the end of the current
fiscal year.
Meanwhile, most of the nation's
mines remained clused today as
union members concluded their twoday strike to memorialize the victims of black lung.
The latest speCulation about
htgher taxes - which the Labor
Department said " will be a primary
method for reducing the deficit" of
the black lung program - came on
the same day that some 5,000 to 7,000
coal miners marched on Washington
to protest budget cuts.
No comment was inunediately
available from the National Coal
Association and the Bitwninous Coal
Operators Association, the industry
bargaining arm now seeking to
negotiate a new contract with the
170,000-member United Mine
Workers union.
The Labor Department official
said the tax , for which legislation is
now .belng written, would have to he
" at a level that wlll not be inflationary in raising the price of coal
too rapidly. We would prefer to do
this on a stretch-out basis.''
The official also said the administration is backing away from
earlier Intentions to seek solvency
for the trust fund by 1983, and that it
might now settle for accomplishing
this by the mid-1980s.
Not long after coal miners concluded their downtown rally and

protest march to the White House,
the Labor Department issued a
statement saying the administration
is proposing to restore solvency to
the 12-year-old trust fund through increased taxes on coal companies
and ~hanges in the way the program
is administrated.
"While specific changes in the tax

i ·.;

~·'I·:

';f:J&lt;

;.u'(

C:

~"' t'

.~..~'·

.

on coal operators and administrative procedures are still in
the dis&lt;;ussion stage, none of these
proposals will affect the benefits
now being paid to coal miners with
blacklung,"thestatementsaid.
It was essentially a reiteration of
assertions that Labor Secretary
Raymond Donovan made late last

week in a letter to Sam Church,
president of the UMW.
In its statement, the Labor Department suggested the coal miners and
others had misread the administration's intentions in connection with a Feb. 18 budget
docwnent, which described the
black lung trust fund as being some
$956 million in debt.
~ IIG Jl
;. ~ 14
·
;,...

STOP

'

BLACK

"'

LUNG
MURI'U!:R

It-

.,...

VI''

MINERS MARCH - Mine workers, protesting benellll, JDal't)b past the Whtte House Moaday af·
President Reagan's proposed ·cuts In black lung ternoon. (AP Laserphoto).

HUD officials tour Middleport
A letter was read from the Ohio·
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
A Housing Urban Development Department of Health, Division of
representative has been in Mid- General Environmental Health Serdleport to view the proposed street, vices, advising an appllcation for
sewer, water and housing projects to $2,873 to purchase fluoride equipbe carried out over the next three ment for the water system has been
years if the village's application for approved.
Four bids on the 1970 Ford pickup
$2,250,000 is approved.
Mayor Fred Hoffman reported on truck were opened with Charles
the visit from Joe Black, HUD Mash' being the successfnl bidder at
representative, at a meeting of Mid- $77. Council voted to pay apdleport Village Council Monday proximately $10,000 for the
night. Hoffman said he and Black relocation of the storm sewer at the
were joined by Kim Shields, com- new apartment complex in lower
munity development director. The Middleport.
Mayor Hoffman noted contractors
trio spent an afternoon looking over
for
the complex will do the
various sites proposed for imrelocation.
It had been estimated to
provement if funding is approved.
cost
the
village
between $45,000 and
The mayor noted that a decision on
$50,000.
the application will be made before
Council also approved an adthe end of March.
ditional
$10,000 payment to Shields,
Hoffman reported the sewer
the
cimununlty
development direcproject on Broadway Street has been
tor,
for
his
work
in securing the
started and that the water line on
Powell will be ready for bid by the $162,700 In Appalachian Regional
Conimission funds. Another fee
end of March.
\

payment to Shields for money ob- ·
tained under the Urban Develop- ,
ment Action Grant was tabled.
Clerk Jon Buck reported thai on
Feb. 21, Ashland Oil had increased
gasoline 3.2 cents a gallon arxl on
March 4, had decreased the cost by 3
cents. Council voted to increase the
amount paid to Martha Howell for
feeding the prisoners from $1.50 to S2
a meal.
The mayor's report showed
receipts for February of $5,351.
Cuuncilman Marvin Kelly reported on plans for the Meigs County
engineer to check a drainage
problem on Middleport Hill. The
need for three alleys to be graded
and stoned was discussed by Councilman Jack Satterfield. He listed
the alleys from Ash to Park, High to ·
Broadway, and Sycamore to Beech
as needing improvement. Others attending were Councilmen Carl
Horky, Dewey Horton, and William
Waltersr

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="125">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2700">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="45300">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="45299">
              <text>March 9, 1981</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2531">
      <name>baer</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="593">
      <name>kimes</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="932">
      <name>richards</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
