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                  <text>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

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·
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

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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 , .•

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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

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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

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CATSUP 3/' 1 00

CLEANSER

CELERY

Farmers
Bank

'3

59

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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

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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

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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
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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

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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
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STOP

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MURI'U!:R

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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

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Tuesday, March 10,1981

.Coml!1:entary

Southern makes fifth
trip to Chillicothe

1981 NCAA Cage pairings

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio:
Tuesday, March 10,1981

Right! Lock the bastards u.._p_________Jo_arn_es_J._.K_ilpa_m_·c___.k:
WASHINGTON - The 225 million
AmerlCillll who do not live or work
in Waahington have many advantages over those of us who toil ip
the nation's capital. Among those
advantages, not · sufficiently apo
preciated, is that nonWashingtonians do not have to bear
with David L. Bazelon. Count your
blessings, 0 friends in the great
beyond.
Bazelon is senior judge of the U. S.
Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia. Now 71, he has served on
the court for 150 years or since 1949,
whichever seems longer. In any

competition to name the most
fatuously liberal jurist In America,
Bazelon would run win, place or
show every time . The other day,
speaking to an audience in San
Diego, he outdid himseU. His theme:
Let us coddle our criminals, for the
poor dear darlings who rape, rob
and murder are more to be pitied
than censured.
.
Do I e1111ggerate? In a moment I
will quote the gent. Judge Bazelon
was responding in character to.the
major address delivered by Chief
Justice Warren E. Burger before the
American Bar Asso~; •t.ion in

Houston last month. The chief's address has been widely reported.
Burger cried out for a new war upon
violent crimes jn America. He asked
for reexamination of liberal bail
laws.that tend to release dangerous
suspects lor weeks or months before
trial. He called for swift trials and
for swift . and summary appeals
limited to allegations ct true
miscarriage of justice. While
acknowledging the importance of
poverty and unemployment in our
appalling crime rates, Burger insisted that " we must not be misled
by cliches and slogans that if we but
abolish poverty drime will also

walk two blocks by day to a grocery,
or haU a block by night to their cars.
Every major city knows such zones
of terror.
up.''
What is wrong, I would inquire,
" Incapacitation must be
recognized as an extraordinarily about "incapacitating" dangel'\)us
suspects with long records of
costly and risky policy," he said.
"To meaningfully affect crime, it criminal activity? Damn right, I
would "lock the bastards up."
might require a garrison state."
Enough. Bazelon's speech rolled Currently, the rights of an accused
on and on. What in the world does must be protected. Burger never
Bazelon think city dwellers live in . suggested otherwise. But what about
now? The greatest lear of the elderly the rights of the victims? Each of us,
is not a lear of poverty or inflation. It in Jefferson's famous phrase, has a
is a fear of crime. In parts of right to life, liberty and the pursuit
Washington, residents are afraid to of happiness - and governments are

especially abhorrent. This amounts
!lilly to a theory that "essentially
translates as: Lock the bastards

The Daily

Ill Colll1 Street
Pomeroy, Oblo
fiH!t-!151
DEVOTED TO THE INTEREST OF mE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERTL. WINGETf
PitbUSher

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH
Gedel'lll Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A. MEMBER of Tbe Auodatecl Preis, lnlaod Dally Ptfts Auod1doo IDd tM

American N~w1paptr Pub lis ben As~oeiatioo .
LETTERS OF OPrNION are weiNIDfli. They sbould be less tb1n 300 wiM'tblloll!. A
retten are subj.ct to ediUilfl •ad mut tM! sigDEd wttl umt, addrts• ucl lelepbom
oumbtr. No IIDii(Ded letters wDI be Pllbllshed. ~tten should bt io KOCNi , ... , ... 1ddressl.a.,
lu~,

!tACINE -

aot penOILIIitie~.

Tradition

FIRST ROUND
MARCH 12·13

Letter to the editor
Who's

responsible! ~

-~

we own our land and then when we
Dear Editor,
'
get
the year to come up with sewage,
I am writing regarding the
which
is grand for sewage for health
Racine-Syracuse sewage disposal
reasons,
to have it, then why do
agreement between the two towns.
some
say
they don't have to get the
The agreement was lor the sewage
110wage
when
they know they are in
to be rill\ to residents to the corthe
corporation
limits of Syracuse
poration limits of Syracuse and
Racine. Now it is not. Some residen- and Racine.
The sewage company is criss-·
ts of Syracuse are not included and
crossing
people's land to save labor,
are in the. corporation limits. Some
and time and to get the job
expenses
in Racine are being treated the same
done
so
they
can go to another town.
way. Who is responsible?
is being jeopardized
People's
land
However, aU rights are equal
by
the
sewage
not going by their
rights of residents according to our
·
land.
old tradition of history and lay of the
A good citizen for all equal rights
lands from our forefathers. All laws
to
everyone.- Alice Freeland.
are the same.
We get surveyors to show us where

AUSTIN
TEXAS

Berry's World

~ANSAS

.......... ·~~/~
"Lay it on me, sweetie! How much will your penny postcards be?"

; Today in history.
.

.•

Nuking the family«-_____A_n_B_uch_wa_kl
marriage) who has one child by a
former marriage to John. Since she
left John to marry RBI ph, she gets no
alimony, and she has to work to supo
port the child and her husband,
whom she is thinking of divorcing
because he's having an affair with
the lady upstairs, Maria, who has no
children Uving with her.
The judge awarded custody of her
children to Maria's parents when
her husband Kip said he was moving
into an apartment that didn't take
kids. ·The grandparents, Bob and
Lilly, were retired, but Bob had to
lind a job to support his grandchildren.
One of the grandchildren, Rona,
had a child out of wedlock, and she
found a job at a McDonald's. So she
leaves her baby with Bob and Lilly
when she works the night shift.
The lather of Rona's child Is Hal,
who is happily married to Carla, and
they have five children, three by
Hal's first marriage to Inez and two
by Carla's first marriage to Fred.
Inez left Hal after she fell In love
with his best friend, Dick, whose

50 YOU

816 NCW5.
501'1. ~y
816 N£iAI5 {

SAil), £¥11).
AJIIAT/5 fT 1

\

HAPI&gt;Y

OAY5, MY
80l HAPPY
OAY5.

010 YOU
TELL HIM

wife had gone to live in a commune
with a religious sect.
Since Dick said he would only
marry Inez if they had no children,
fnez told Hal he could have the kids,
though she sees them on weekends
when she isn't doing volunteer work
lor an adoption agency.
Fred's something else again. He is
living with Dedra, who has two
children, but he told her he doesn't
want to get married again because
he doesn 't trust women. Dedra
doesn't mind because the father of
her children, Danny, was a cad, and
she's not ready to make another
commitment. The slate does not consider them a family of four for lax
purposes, because they aren't
legally wed . So although Fred supo
ports the children, he cannot deduct
them as dependents.
Danny lives with his sister Ella,
who has four children and a husband
named Sid. Sid is sore as hell a bout
this arrangement because he can
barely support his family, much less
Danrty, who only works when the
spirit moves him.

Ella keeps Introducing Danny ~
her divorced friends in hopes he 'II
marry one of them. But her friends
all seem to have children, and Da~­
ny says his first reSponsibility Is tv
his own kids.
:
One of Ella's divorced friencij,
Caroline, has one child, and is livi'1
with a man named Arnie. She wlii
collecting weUare when her ca.le
worker paid a surprise visit to htf
visit to her flat and discovered Arnil!
was living there. "The man in thf
house" rule prevailed, and ~lei­
payments were stopped. Caroli..
got a job, the city closed down tit
day-care center in her heig~
horhood, and she couldn't work, ~
she had to move in with her sist~
who has four children.
,
I guess I could go on but I mighi
cooluse you. The point is that government statisticians keep sticking lo
their fantasies that every household
consists of a family of four - a
mother, a lather and two children.
That's why nothing they plan turns
out to be right.

DOONESBURY

Y&amp;T. C£AR~

.
....

.r

J

ARIZONA STATE
PHILADELPHIA

47
xX-Ade na 63, zane Trace 43

x · SOUTHEASTERN
ADENA 38

52

East 55
xx· South Webster 71, Lu casville
Valley 4B
·

x· EASTERN I PIKE! 60, SO UTH
WEBSTER 40· xx

13.

x · PE E BLES
ADAMS 53

xx NORTH

At Meigs. High School,

Rock Springs (Pomeroy)
Southweste rn 64, North Gallia 50
x ·Southern 81, Kyger Creek 50
xx -Eastern (Meigs) 68, South·
western 50

x · SQU THERN (MEIGS)
56,
EASTE RN IMEIGSI ·xx47
At Nelsonv'ille·Y ork High
School, Buchtel (Nels.)
Crooksvi ll e 78, x-Trimble 70
xx -Miller 78, Federal Hocking 35
xx·MILLER 63, CROOKSV ILLE
55
At Rock Hili High
School, Ironton
Hanna n Tra ce 51, Sy mmes Valley

46
x ·Gree n 70, Ironton St. Joe 64
xx·Oak H il\66 , Hannan Trace 65
x GREEN 66, OAK HILL 58
At Hillsboro High
School, Hillsboro
unioto 81, Lynchburg Clay 60
xx-Whiteoak 52, Fairf ield 51
K· Painf Valley 54, Unioto51

xx · PORTSMOUTH CLAY 62, x
WESTERN I PIKE ) 40
At Minford High School,
Minford
x -Eastern (P i ke) 68, PortsmoUth

.x·

Af Portsmoufh West High
School, Portsmouth
)( -Peeb les 74, West Un ion 52
xx-North Adams 55, Manchester

CLASS A
At Valley High School ,
Lucasville
Portsmouth Notre Dame 53, New
Boston 45
xx· Portsmouth Clay 55. Pts. Notre
Dame37
x-Westerri ( Pik e) 36, Piketon 31

52 ,

x · PAINT
VALLEY
WHITEOAK 59

71,

xx ·

x - l ndicatestop-see dedtea m .
xx ·
t nd icate s second -seeded
team.
Championship game in capital letters ,

~

BELPRE - This past weekend, pionship rouod.
foundation for a winning team. The
Under great preSsure in the Meigs team fini'shed its season with
the M~igs High School wrestling
team competed in the Southeast opening moments of the cham- a 26-22 tournament record and a 6-7
District Tournament here at Belpre pionship match, King took early con- dual match record under its new firHigh School, where Brian King trol and looked as though he was on st year coach Larry Grimes.
became district runner-up. All his way to the state tournament. , - - - - - - - - - - , - , - - - ' season long, Meigs has showed con- King took an early 5-11 lead over Kirk
tinual improvement which carried of South Point and was taking the unover into tournament play. The disputed upper hand in the final matLarry Grimes coached Marauder ch. A heated battle later developed
team fared very well in sectional and Kirk fought back to defeat King ·
2.ou.••p _ _,_
competition, earning them eight ber- in the third pericxl'on- a take-down, 8~/}~
ths in the Distrjct Tournament.
5.
.tr.cvwr~·
Others
from
the
hard-working
Brian King · fared the best of all
Yl.ll,\lll l llll. l"'l .l l \, •11111.1\\lfl..:
_ . ....
Meigs wrestlers in District com- Meigs Marauder team were Scott
petition by fj,st pinning Greg An-' Hartinger, Doug Neece, Troy Bauer,
derson of Hillsboro, then coming and Brian King, who all won matback to pin .f'endergraft of ches at the district meet.
In the latter stages of the season
Washinb'lon Courthouse in the next
--- - - - --~
; .. ;:.·,.
match to earn his way to the cham- Meigs came on strong and carried
momentum into tournament play.
SCA~~-~~. · \
Many of th~sc young wrest.lers will
return ne&lt;t year to form a strong

"l

l

• "' . ..

•

'-

'

•

•

-~

'- • l

-

\

....

; Meigs tournament action continues
iUSPSill-llfl

A Di~rlakMI ol Multimedhl, IlK'.

Publl.!ihed eyery afternoon

e~;ce pt

Sunda)·,

Mooday throtq(h Friday , Ill Cou rt Street, by
the Ohio V1lley Publishing Company -

Member: The A.s.&lt;locialtd Preu, Inland DMI·
ly Prel!l AsJociation and the American
\ ...
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Assuclates, 311H Eudld Ave., Clrveland.
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FOITMASTER : Stnd ad&amp;es.~ tu Tht: Duily ,
Sentinel, II 1 Cou rt St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ,

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MIDDLEPORT - A full schedule Bradbury club with 21 points and . losers bracket and at 7 p.m. Letart
of basketball action was completed Tim Cassell netted 12 points. Tupo will meet Pomeroy Tannehill with
Monday evening at the Meigs Junior pers Plains was led by Jeff Caldwell the losers being eliminated from further competition.
High School, where Harrisonville, . with 16 and Eddie Collins with 10.
At 8:30the battle of the undefeated
The final game of the evening was
Bradbury Kitchen, Bradbury
place when Bradbury Cassell
takes
Cassell, and Racine clahned vic- nipoand-tuck the entire first quarter ,
meets
Racine in the only winners
tories in the sixth grade divlsioin of ending in a 21-14 haUtime score with
bracket
game. The championship
the Meigs County Elementary I!Bcine leading Pomeroy Tannehill.
game
is
slated
for 7 p.m. Tuesday,
Basketball Tournament.
In the battle of the undefeated
March
17,
when
the winners bracket
In the evening's first game Racine went on to take home a 37-20
winner
will
meet
the winner of the
Harrisonville stonned to a 41-20 vic- lead after the exciting first half aclosers'
bracket.
tory over Rutland in the losers tion. Matt Harris ·Jed the winners
If tiie losers bracket winner wins
bracket of the double elimination with 16, while T. Connolly zipped 14
the
game, then action will resume
tourney .
points. For the talented Pomeroy
following
evening since the· winthe
The loss eliminated Rutland from Tannehill club Huey Eason netted 10
ners
bracket
repesentative
will have
the tournament. Harrisonville had a points.
Action resumes Wednesday suffered only one loss.
well rounded scoring attack led by
t-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:;:;::::;:;:;:;:;::;;:;;:;;:;;~
This Saturday, March 14, the four- I
Jessie Howard with 13 points, Chris evening, March 11, with three games
th and filth grade tourney begins
Hanning 10 p~ints, and Marty Cline being slated, starting at 5:30p.m. In
with eight games scheduled in the
10 points. For Rutland Kent Eads the opening game Harrisonville will
first
round of play.
meet Tuppers Plains No. 2 in· the
netted 14 to lead his club.
Also in the losers .bracket Bradbury Kitchen claimed an exciting 4136 win to eliminate Syracuse. The
INDIANS POST WIN
Bradbury offensive attack wsa led
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - The Littleton and Tom Veryzer had three
by J . R. Kitchen's game high 22 poin· Cleveland Indians pounded out 20 •
hits each.
'-'· followed by Stanley Broome with hits in their 14-13 exhibition baseball
Litileton's hit with two outs in the
eight markers. For Syracuse Chris victory over the Hanshin Tigers of loth inning scored Von Hayes from
Deemer netted 12 points and David · Japan.
third base with the winning run .
Amburgey bucketed 10 points.
Miguel Dilone led the way in the
Rookie hopeful Gordy Glaser earfn the winners bracket two un- Monday contest with five hits in six
nt!d the win, pitching a scoreless
defeated teams met and produced a at bats. Angelo LoGrande, Larry
loth.
very good ballgamc which was won
by Bradbury Cassell, 41-35, over r---------------------------l
Tuppers Plains No.2.
Donnie Becker led the winning

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WICHITA ,KANSAS

MAR HAND r~~~;J-_:M:A:.:RC:::H~2.:.0·:;22
DAYTON- TENN.CHATTANOOGA1
INDIANA .
DAYTON, OHIO

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At Ohio UniverSfty
Branch, Chillicothe
xx-Adena , 61, Hunfington -41
x · Southeastern 641, Bishop Flaget

•

IOWA

CREIGHTON
DAYTON SAINT JOSEPHS r:JoE~P~AU~L::}-----,
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Second cl85.'1 pMLI~e p11id at
Pomeroy, Ohio.

• •

Today is Tuesday, March 10, the 69th day of 1981. There are 296 days left
~ intheyeer.
Today' s highlight in history :
\•
'
On Mllrch 10, 1945, American B-29 bombers began the first lireboinb
raids on Japan In World Warn.
On this date:
In 1786, Thomas Jefferson was named U.S. minister to France, sue"" ceedlng Benjamin Franklin.
In 1822, martial law wu declared in Johannesburg, South Africa, as ·
!' strikle¥oke oiJt.
,.
r:
In !Wa, former French Air Force offlctlr Jean-Merle ,Bastien was
'; executed for his attempt to 8B88JISinate President Charles de Gaulle.

'

last Wednesday evening by Peebles,
81-Gl. Eastern of Pike aowned Green
last Thursday, 61-45. Each year
Southern seems to have moved one
step further up the ladder in tournament play. The first step is the
sectional, then the District,
Regional, and State Tournaments,
all of which lay an important role in
crowning a slate champion.
Eight teams go to the District after winning Sectional crowns. Listed
below are scores of various games
along the tournament trail, leading
to berths in the District Tournament. Two teams from this tournament go to the Regional in Athens.
In the upper bracket the winner of
the Peebles-Pike Eastern game will
make the trip to Athens and in the
lower bracket either Southern or
Clay will face Paint Valley or
Southeaste for rights to a Regional
berth. Here are the scores of games
leading to the district :

King makes good showing

NEW ORLEANS
MARCH 20 22

MIDEAST

on government projects without
having to give up rights to
discoveries they make in doing ~Q.
An incentive act changes the
securities laws to make it easier for
small businesses to raise money.
And a small business development
act helps small businesses improve
liquidity
Stewart, a Ia wyer, aided the ca~
as the SBA's Chief Counsel lor A,~
vocacy, a delicate position lor such •
relentless, dedicated, driving person, one that easily could have put
him in conflict with other administration executives because of
his right to prod their agencies.
He knew that support was growing
behind him. National, state and local
small-business groups have grown
more active and convincing. And
they aren't likely to relax now that
they've begun winning a few .
'
0

LOUISVILLE

WICHITA STATE
SOUTHERN U

992·2:1~ .

Unfortunately the "norm" is not
normal anymore.
And that's why most govenunent
figures are haywire.
Taking the place of the family of
lour is the family of eight or nine,
depending oo how many marriages
have been involved.
This is the most realistic family
profile of the '80s: Betsy is the divorced mother of three young children,
whose former husband, Edward, is
married to Ruth, who has lour
children of her own. Edward gives
child support and some alimony to
Betsy, but not enough to pay the
bills. So Betsy has to work. Ruth also
has to work to help Edward pay Betsy and keep her kids in shoes,
because her former husband, Ralph,
doesn't work and won't contribute to
child support.
He is married to Greta, (his third

MIDWEST

AU.STIN,TEUS

ARKANSAS
MERCER

KANSAS

WASHINGTON (APl - Small is," he said, claiming "small most of his adult years in some
business· has finally got its act business is four to 24 times more cost aspect of small business, five major
pieces of legislation have been enactogether here, said Miltoo Stewart effective than big business. "
Organizations attuoend to small ted, all in a few months between last
as he prepared to leave the U.S.
Small Business Administration. " All business - the National Small swruner and last November.
The Regulatory Flexibility Act
groups are talking to ooe another."
Business Association,
the
&lt;;ritics say it's about time. The Federation of Independent Business, assures small business that it will be
small-business portion of output has the U.S. Chamber of Commerce treated differently from large
steadily diminished in relation to among them - have stepped up business . Before the act, a
large enterprises, and to many their legislative efforts in recent regulation that might affect a large
Americans the word business has an years, keeping scorecards on · company only slightly might put a
automatic "big" before it.
congressmen - and then remem- smaller enterprise out of business.
The act reduces that possibility. .
Stewart sees an end to the trend. beri .gat election time.
Success encouraged cooperation,
The Equal Access to Justice Act
Times have changed; small
recognize~ the distinction between
business can help resolve today's and when President Carter conbig business, which often can alford
problems, he said as he left lor vened a White House Conference on
to defend against costly government
Boston to Qecome editor of Inc., a Small Business in January 1980, the
growing, enterprising magazine for advocates had learned the ad- litigation, and small business, which
small business and becomes an of- vantages of cooperation. They sometimes had to knuckle uoder if it
ficer of the company that publishes pressed their demands, and when couldn't afford to defend itself, no
it.
they returned home they pressed matter how just its cause.
A patent act allows small
"You must look at small business their legislators. .
Now, said Stewart, who has spent
businesses and universities to work
because it's where the innovation

nonn.

REGION

-~L.:;,:AM::.::A:::.R-~ L0UIS IAN ASTATE

,WICHITA

Small businesses have act together

In trying to deal with the social
and economic condition of the
modem family, the government
always seems to refer to "a married
couple with two children" as the

S£CONO ROUND
MARCH 14·15

MISSOURI

MISSISSIPPI
Shortly before adjourning, the 2tith Congress of the Soviet Conununist
Party re-elected the serving 14-member Soviet Politburo for another liveyear term, a 'triumph' not only for President Leonid Brezhev but for oldness.
The average age of the group is 69-under 70 only because of the recently appointed Mikhail Gorbachov, 50, the agricultural expert expected to
solve the Soviet farm problem and probably scapegoat in the likely event
he does not.
·
Thus Soviet Communists remain true to the tradition embodied in the
wisdom of their aged--&lt;lven as it failed to solve traditional problems.

Tonight, the RacineSouthern Tornadoes of Coach Carl
WoUe, return to the tournament trail
to lace the Portsmouth Clay Panthers in the district tournament at
Chillicothe High School at 7 p.m. .
This will be Southern's fifth
straight district trip. Southern owns
. a 4-2 record on the Chillicothe hardwood.
The past two seasons, Southern
has gained a berth in the Regional
Tournament at Athens, and last year
regiend as ooe of Ohio's "Final
Four" .by going to the State Tournament in Columbus.
Of the teams competing in the
district, Southern has played two in
regular season play, Miller twice
and Ross Southeastern once.
In the opening game of the season,
Southern came home from Miller
with a 61-16 win, then defeated the
Falcons at home by a 77-47 score.
Southern edged Ross Southeastern
by one point, 58-57, in a great battle
at Racine.
In pre-season scrimmage
Southern played on even terms with
the very quick Pike-Eastern team
and the muscular, fifth ranked
Peebles team, who are both in
District competition.
Should Southern win tonight, it
will play the winner of the Ross
Southeastern-Paint Valley game.
Ross is 1~3. while Paint Valley is !57.
Miller was ousted in District play

.

It was a tough speech. I applauded
every line of it. But the chief's address left Judge Bazeloo distraught.
How could Burger say such terrible
things?
The only humane approach, S.id
Bazelon, is to attack the root cause
of clime. We should concentrate, he
said, upon "poverty, prejuice, poor
housing, inadequate education, insufficient food and medical care, a
bad family envirorunent or no
family at all."
"The re~l roots of crime," he said,
"are associated with a constellation
of suffering so hideous that, as a
society, we cannot bear to look it in • ----·
the lace." Because of their brutal
social and economic deprivation,
criminals tum to crime "for
economic survival, a sense of excitement and accomplishment, and
an outlet for frustration, desperation
and rage."
Brazelon had no use lor the
remedies urged by the chief justice.
The idea of incapacitating
dangerous suspects through preventive detention struck him as

Senti~

AsaJst.at hbllsher/Conlrnller

those :

instituted amoog men to make
rights secure.
;
Burger was exactly right. In .our :
own time governmepts have failed •
in this fundamental duty. For one :
reason or another (and for some of ',
these causes the Supreme Court it- ~
seU is responsible), our ,system of 1
criminal justice has all but collapo :
sed. Taking into account the whole ;
number of violent crimes, few •
criminals are caught; fewer sUU are :
convicted: fewer still are put behind :
bars. Bazelon's heart bleeds for "the ~
bastards." Mine doesn't. I've been i
mugged.
'

~

disapP~fi!r."

The DailY Sentinei-Pa!!.e-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Page-4

....,~

(Jster seeks to keep
highest Reds' salary
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - George
·Foster wants to be the highest-paid
player in baseball when he ·
negotiates another contract with the
Cincinnati Reds.
The 32-year-old outfielder said the
largest salary in baseball will be his
starling point when he opens contract talks for the 1983 season.
"The minimwn (demand) would
he what the highest is when I'm
negotiating," Foster said Monday.
Foster said he deserves more than
any other player because of his consistency in batting average and run
production. He has averaged more
runs batted in over the last five
seasons than anyone else, and is
second only to Philadelphia's Mike
Schmidt in average home runs per

'X--....... ./;
UMPIRE BARLICK SCHOOlS REDS PITCHERS
Veteran major league empire AI Harlick, left,
schools Cincinnati Reds pitchers on balk rules at

White Sox Board Chairman Reinsdorf said, " I'll be very, very surprised if a contract were not
executed by the end of the week.''
But Fisk. asked if the deal might
fall through, said, " There's always a
chance. I'm actually not signed and,
in actuality, I am a free agent."
Baseball agent Jerry Kapstein,
was meeting with White Sox lawyers
beginning today to work out the final
details of the contract, Fisk said. He
hinted that a multi-year deal was in
the· works, but no other terms were
disclosed. ·
Fisk, 33, became a free agent

front office of the New Englaf\d
Patriots. He . worked at league
headquarters in the late 1000s.
The Browns have just completed a
successful year, winning the
league's American Conference Central Division championship.
Hadhazy explained that
"philosophical differences" with
Modell caused his decision to leave
the organization.
Modell recently restricted
Hadhazy's duties to signing players
and minor tasks associated with running the front office.
Modell has also recently increased
the front office power of Tommy
Prothro, the team's director of
player. personnel.
A memorandum issued by Modell

OhJo H.S. Boy5 Basketball

Diltrirt Toomamnu
Moltday's Games
CLASSAA

At S~ubfnvtlle
Tri-Valley 67, River View 61

New Matamoras 1 Frontier 1:16, Carrollton
• 6'l

scores---CLASS A

AI Cauto11 Fieldhouse
Windham &amp;:1, Richmond Heighl.!! 61
Kinsman Badt~:er 79, Ashtabula St. John

"Rirhmund

MCbUlitotbe
Dale SE 52, Paint Valley 46

"I put myself in a different class,"
Foster said. "I'm not saying that
I'm head and ·sho\llders abOve
everyone else, but I've compiled
statistics \hat nobody else in
modern-day baseball has done."

them."
Foster noted that Schmidt and the
New York Yankees' Reggie Jackson
will negotiate new contracts before

when the Red Sox failed to mail him
a new contract before a date spelled
out in his previous contract. That
episode apparently soured his
relations
with R ed
Sox
management, partjcularly
executive vice president Haywood
Sullivan.
"What it has come down to was a
breach of contract," said Fisk.
The White Sox sales pitch reached
a climax last weekend with four
days of intensive negotiations involving Fisk, the two owners and
Sox General Manager Roland
Hemond.

members of the organization who
could take part in trade talks.
Hadhazy and Prothro also recently disagreed on whether to bring a
new man into a front office job, and
Modell backed Prothro.

Foster led the National League in

runs batted in for three consecutive
years, 1976 through 1978, and topped
the league in home runs In 1m and
1978 with 52 and 40, respectively.
Foster, making a reporled$700,000
a year on his current contract, said
baseball players' salaries are a rnatter of simple economics - when a
player is iil demand, the salary offers tend to increase.
The power hitter said it is " hard to
say," whether ball players are worth the money they make. However,

.

•

ANNOUNCING
THE OPENING OF

THE OFFICES OF
•

'

STORY &amp; STORY
A nORNEYS AT LAW
Steven L. Story and Karen H. Story
236 W. 2nd, Pomeroy, Oh.
(Formerly Meigs Gen. Hospital)
Office Ph. 992-6624
Home Ph. 992·3.523

The deeply religious outfielder
said he wanted "to get better known
and let people·know what I'm doing"
in order to advance his work with
youngsters. Foster is involved with
nwnerous community activities, Including a halfway house for youths
in Dayton, Ohio.
Foster said he wept to a public
relations agency because the Red~!
promote "certain people that they
feel they are abl~ to sell to people."
" If the team is not going to
promote you, you have to go out and
promote yourself," he said.

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he said the club owner:s don 'tl!ave to
offer large salaries.
"While they are paying them, why
should we refuse?" he said. "We are
not holding them at gunpoint, forcing them tO' give us the money."
Foster signed with a Clncirmatl
public relations firm last year to
promote his image and help sec~~~'~!
endorsements. Previously, he was
represented by a public relations
group ln California.

I. tkPaul (55 )

27-1

2 Oregon St. ($)
3. Arizona St.

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6. North Carolina
7. Notre Dame
8. Kentucky
9. Indiana....
tO. UCLA
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12. IAuisville t il

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111. Maryland
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21}.7
214
20. Arkan.sa:!l
22-7
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AL!iu rect"iving votes in alphabetical order : Bo:~ton College; Clem:wo; Creighton ;
Fre."JnO Statt' : GeorgetOWTI , D.C.; Hou.s·
ton ; ld.uho : Kan!WIS; lamar ; Missouri ;
Pe nn ; Purdue: San Francisco; South Ala ·
banta : Stluthern Mis:~Wlppi; Syracu::~e:
V i I I a nov a ; Virginia Commonwealth ;
Wlchit..a SLate.
.

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What vou don't know about income averaging

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BLOC~ Mason, W.Va.
Ph. 773-9128
Pomeroy, OH.
PH. 992-3796
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,ylason, W.Va.

"Thf! phone c~
comb1ned our four phone
syste1ns into one. It meant
big savings for us •• :•
When is a coal company not a coal
company?
When it's also into trucking, farming at1r1 mine supply.
They're all parts of the Bowman family businesses, each with
its own phone system. But they
outgrew these systems, and
asked the General Telephone
Communications Consultant for'
help. We suggested a GTD120C computer-controlled system.
"Without Communications Consultant Esther Klinebriel, we wouldn't have
known what was available to save us time and
money," said Mr. Bowman. "Our new phone system handles calls for
all four companies. Yet each gets its own phone bills for accounting
purposes. The (light-answer feature is very
important. Now we get after-hours calls at
home - these are almost always very Important calls."
~===~;;..----~
Our C~mmunications Consultants
"'
have only one job: to make your telecommunications better and better.
We have what you need.

We keep yc)u talking.

[cfi=l

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784

-PbU Bowm-. Vice Pre•ldent, Waterloo Coal Co., Oak BW

r
REEVES REPLACING MILLER AS BRONCOS COACH - Red
Miller, right, has heen fired as coach of the Denver Broncos football
team, KOA-TV reported Monday. According to the station, Miller Is helng
replaced by Dan Reeves, left, offensive coordinator of the Dallas
Cowboys. ( AP Laserphoto).

~

~-

By 1be A~&amp;od.lied PrHI
The Top Twenty teams, in the final Associated Press college basketball poll for
the i!MI0-81 season, with first-place votes
in rrentheses, this season's records and
tota points. Points based on ~19-li-17·1615-14-13-12·11·!1)..9-8-7-G--5-1-3-2-1:

~~~~

773-5592

~-

:;:::.?-

College's top 20

,..-----------------------------1

recently designated Prothro, Coach
Sam Rutigliano and Allan Webb, ~
director of pro personnel, as the only

---~Tournament

alone."

"There are guys who are able to
hit for power or average," Foster
said. "I've been able to combine

~ Hadhazy leaves Cleveland
· CLEVELAND (AP) - The front
. office of the Cleveland BrownS is undergoing a shakeup, sparked by the
sudden resignation of Peter
Hadhazy, the National Football
League team's general manager
and executive vice president.
Hadhazy is resigning effectuve
May I, according to Art Modell,
owner of the Browns.
" I deeply regret this decision of
·: Peter's," Modell said. 1 'He came to
·· the Browns as my friend, and he will
: leave the Cleveland Browns as my
· friend.
: ·"I wish him the very best of
: everything in any endeavor he pur. sues."
·
· Hadhazy, 36, came to the Browns
il\ 1976 as executive assistant to
: Modell. He took on additional duties
· as general manager a year later.
· Prior to his service with the
: Browns, he spent five years in the

himself individually • with other
players, but said, "I feel l stand

season.

spring training camp in Tampa Monday. At extreme
right wllh jacket Is tom Seaver, and Frank Pastore,
others are unidentified. ( AP Laserphoto).

Fisk signs with White Sox
CHICAGO (AP) - After almost a
. decade as the pride of Boston,
Carlton Fisk says he's ready for a
: change of scenery. But Chicago
White Sox owners Eddie Einhorn
· and Jerry Reinsdorf still are trying
to get the Ali.Star catcher to sign on
the dotted line.
Fisk appeared Monday at a news
· conference with White Sox officials
: amid speculation that a contract
already had been signed. But the
veteran catcher said only that he
had made a decision - " a potential
· decision, really" - to come to
· Chicago.

his expires. He declined to compare

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�Tuesday, March 10,1981
1

DICKTRACY

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IMAGINE YOU'RE
USED TO
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El-ABORATE

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The Daily Senfinei- Pa e-11

Pom e roy- Middleport, Ohio

·Television
•
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VIewmg

RE'S NO OTHER PLACE CN
f 'D RAT"HER BE, LIZZ .

fl'lf\}N} fi;}1t

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~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

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byHenriArnOkjaodBoblee

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one len~r 10 each square, to form
four ordinary words.

LIWLT

MARCH 10, 1981

•

I

Whew! Glad

that's over!

I ,/
•

•

EVENING
6 ,00 rti iJ ['f) Q (j)(@©J CD NEWS
[ 3 } BACKYARD
(5)
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
lU ABC NEWS
'

Cll 3·2· 1 CONTACT Progra mming

''

~TILL THINK LC~ G

••

E?A~Y

Wine and·cheese party
nabs A CS donations
An innovation to lund raising activities - this time for the Meigs
Unit of the American Cancer Society
- was provided Sunday afternoon
through a cheese and wine tasting
party held at the Meigs IM.
Several hundred Meigs Countians
tW1led up to taste the cheeses, sip
the wines, enjoy a style revue staged
by several local merchants
featuring local models and to enjoy
the lilting melodies from the organ
of Armand Turley.
Mrs. Pat Ingels and Ralph Werry
co-chaired the " different" fund

raising even! and serving was by
members of the board of the local
cancer unit.
Mod~ling clothing from Bahr
Clothiers, Middleport and Elber·
feld's and the New. York Clothing
House in Pomeroy were Peggy
Harris, Maureen Hennessy, Maida
Mora, Richard Rupe, Patty Pickens,
Barbara Mathews, Brenda Hill, Patty Circle, Tonya Davis, Joann
Shuler, · Teresa Collins, Fennan
Moore, Bruce Reed, Richard Rupe,
Jim Thomas and George Harris.

Two celebrate birthdays

~.

Adam Moodispattgh

Adam Moodispaugh, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Moodispaugh,
Pomeroy, recently observed his first
birthday with a party.
Cake, ice cream and punch were
served. Attending besides his parents were his brother, Bobby, Mr. and
Mrs. Danny Robinson, Danny, Jr.,
Marcia and Andy, Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Laudennilt, Larry and Sis. ·
Sending gifts were Homer
Moodispaugh, Narsa Moodispaugh,
Marlene and Darlene, Mrs. Marcia
Capehart, Mrs. Eva Hysell, and Mr.
and Mrs. Nonnan Terrell, James
and Kathy.

MOTI'O
T!ie motto of the state of Maine is
Dirigo, I Direct.

Christy Hawkins
A party was held recently
honoring Christy Hawkins, daughter
of Bob and Dolly Hawkins, on her fif.
th birthday. A strawberry shortcake
theme was carried out with cake,
punch, ice cream and chips being
served.
Attending and presenting gifts
were Jackie Icenhower, Shelby
Ohlinger, Tammy McFarland,
Eunice and Rainelle Duff, Goldie,
Jeff and Harold Car.ton, Cathy Clonch, Donna, Roy and Jeremiah John·
son, Nancy and Jerica Clark, Cinda
Harkless, Katie Altizer, Jodi Grate,
and Tommy Pennington.
Sending gifts were Jane Wise,
Beattice Howell, Scottie and Wanda
Gardner, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Ohlinger, grandparents.

Program on dentistry heard
A program was presented by
Craig Mathews, D.D.S., on dental
care and prevention to the students
of Grades I, 2, 3, 4, L.D. and Special '
Education at the Pomeroy Elemen·
tary School.

Each grade was given an individual presentation by the doctor.
He was assisted by his wife, Bar·
bara, who often substitutes for the
staff at Pomeroy Elementary.

'Round Meigs Local .
By Supt. David L. Gleason
We would like to congratulate
Denise Turner, a junior at Meigs
High School, for being selected the
Meigs
Local
School District
candidate for the
Martin W. Essex
School for the
talented and gif·
ted
students.
Denise was selected after a lengthy
process at Meigs
High School. Her candidacy papers
will be submitted for further review
to the State conunittee which will
then be tasked with making the final
60 selections. We feel Denise has an
excellent chance on being chosen as
a partici]lllnt and wish her a lot of
luck.
We also would like to congratulate
the other five students who made It
to the top six nominations at Meigs
High. These students are Tanuny
Eichinger, Susan Daruter, Lynne
Oliver, Laura Smith, and Fred
Young. Each of these students were
excellent nominations; however, we

are limited to only one nomination
per year.
On March II at 7:30 p.m. the
Meigs band will travel to Jackson
for an Exchange Concert. Our band
will perfonn at Jackson this year
and next year Jackson will perform
here for us. It should prove exciting.
Mter these two performances the
band travels to Gallipolis next
Friday for District Competition at 8
p.m. We certainly wish Doug Hill
and his musicians the best.
The Auditor's Office has infonned
us that Meigs will be audited beginning this week. This is a typical
school district audit that will take
approximately three months and iS
usually done every other year. A
special pre-audit meeting was l)e14
Thursday morninl( with the
auditors, Mrs. Wagner, Mr. Powell
(Board President) and me in at·
tendance.

If I can be of any assistance to you
or if you have something you would
like for me to discuss in this weekly
article, please contact me at 9922153.

Hc'o; W~•L Ei'\bU&amp;H
~0 COME TQ THE

BllOI&lt;EN t..S~ ~!

TALK

TA&amp;L.E L

UNTIL MARY
G0E5 OUT TO
FfED TH f;

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•

ENHANCING - Organ music by Armand Turley euhanced a cbeese
and wine tasting party and a local style show Sunday afternoon at lbe
Meigs Inn with proceeds from the event going to lbe Meigs Unit of lbe
American Cancer Society.

HAVE?

NO CHANCE
TO

NO NEED TQ
,..---Jf5POON-FEEO HIM··

JOHN 'S THE NUT WHO
WA~ HACK IN ' U5 ON
THE; TRAIL .. WITH A

UTA AND

may be mlerrupted due to
pledQing .
Ci!J OVEREASY Guest: Sophia Lore n, a c tress . Hos t . Hugh Downs.
(C losed -Captio ned ; U.S.A .)
6 ' 30 r2) 1J(1) NBC NEWS
( ~} 20th CENTURY GUIDELINES
( 5] BOB NEWHART SHOW
( 6 1 FACE THE MUSIC
Q [j) ~Q] CBS NEWS
C9l WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
(W LILIAS, YOGA AND YOU
~ 2J CD ABC NEWS
6'58 (:j) CBN UPDATE NEWS
7,00 (2] 0 PM MAGAZINE
(3l
GERALD
DERSTINE

~

.

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PRESENTS

I
SUCCESSFUL- A cheese and wine laslillg party was beld Sunday at
lbe Meigs Inn wllb lbe Meigs U11it of lbe American Cancer Society
recelvillg the benefits. Pictured, seated, Is Mrs. Joan Anderson, local unit
president, and wllb ber are Mrs. Pat Ingels and Ralph Werry wbo cochaired lbe IDDovatlve event.
•

Helen Help Us

Another inequality - she 's
her own clean-up department
BY HELEN BOTIEL
Special COrre!lpondent
DEAR HELEN :
Sometimes my husband gets m11d
and breaks things. Not often, but
he's been known to throw a glass
across the room, then stalk out for
me to clean up the pieces. If Ilea ve
them, the kids might cut them·
selves.
I ask him " Why ?" and he says it:s
a safe way of releasing anger and I
should try it.
Well, I did, but guess who not only
picked the shards off the floor, but
went downtown and replaced the
glass next day?
No wonder women swallow their
anger and let it fester inside: if we
explode, we must be our own cleanup committee, and that makes us
even madder. - TEMPERING MY
TEMPER
DEARTMT:
How right you are! Even if we
slam a door bard, we may knock
something off the wall, and ten to
one, we're the ones who repair the
damage.
Beating a pillow is safer - unless
it breaks down. - R
DEAR HELEN :
Your recent women's survey
asked if we'd ever slept with a man
on a first date. (Now why do they use
the word " sleep? " It Isn't
definitive!)
It happened to me oniy once, and
despite what moralists say, it was

wonderful. I really thought this was
the beginning of a great love affair,
but our second date didn't match up.
We found nothing much to talk
about. Even the sex seemed dull.
He 's asked me for another date.
Do you suppose we can bring back
the magic? - MARIA
DEAR MARIA:
A third encounter of the first kind ?
I doubt it. Dates that start with
skyrockets often end up duds
because second meetings reveal the
person beneath the sex appeal- and
sometimes he (or she) is mostly a
romantic dream. - H.

ANNIE

IT'$ THE SYSTEM, AHHIE1
THE INTERN OFTEH 1'/0RKS
AROUND THE CLOCK, (jETS A

FEW HOURS SLEEP AND DOES IT
1----"'-"-= \ AGIIIH-100 MOORS A WEEII.
OR.IIOitE-

DEARHELENo
What is it about women ? I read the
other day of another one who met a
convicted rapist-murder while he
was in prison, and married him. The
man is sentenced to die. There 's no
dpubt he cornmitled the crimes .
Are these women masochists, or
wbat? - GEORGE
DEAR GEORG E o
That, plus other things : These
women, perhaps, are equal parts
champion of the underdog, sensation-seeker , . bleeding heart,
romantic believer in "love conquers
all," masochist and mothering type,
with maybe.jl bit of headline-hunter
thrown in.
I can't understand 'em, but for
every major crime, there 's almost
always a female who dreams of
marrying the perpetrator. Strange
... - ll
,

kt.YLA , t.N D
n&lt;OoT'o&lt; MIKEL ! THEY

--F r •.uo

g,oo

GASOLINE A!.LEY

She has
the flu,

She's opehed

her

By JOHN BARBOUR
The Aaoociated Pre••
SECOND OF A SERIES
It used to be that when a
child was done being a child,
there was a gathering of the
clan, rites were performed,
and the child emerged from
the eimple ceremony a man or
1

woman.

Not so anymore.' Not at
least in the United States. The
American child enters in
junior high school a sill-year
period when he or she is
neither fish nor fowl. a period
when the growing body must
observe its own evolution,
wondering what part ,is
vestigial and what part it will
carry forwsrd into adulthood.
This enforced no-man 's laud
is called adolescence, and it
has its own rules. The adoles·
cent is dependent on the
largesse of the parents. But in
fact . the adolescent is dependent on the approval of his
peers for self-esteem . H e or
she begins t.o cope with new
freedoms, test old adult·
enforced dictums.
It all leads to equivocation
and misunderstanding, and
provides the backdrop for the
marijuana epidemic that is
embracing America's youth.
It has been said that
adolescence is a product of af·
fluence , that is doesn't exist in
less sophisticated societies or
meaner times. When a child
goes to work at 13 to help sup·
port a family, the head of
which will likely die before 40,
there is no time to spare for
adolescence.
The teen·agers in our af. fluen t society are a d ifficult
time at best, marked by oil
kinds of personality crises, the
need to be "popular " with
one's own, the neejl to perlorrp
in school, the need to identify
one 's self as an individual.
The American teen-ager,
certainly of the last three
decedss, hae spent an unuoual

amounl of time in front of the
mirror, not out of aily T)Bf•
cissistic need, j usl t.o find out
who that wa s staring back.
The peer group hecomes the
mirror, and it takes time be·
fore a t.een·ager rea lizes he is
not all those images out there,
but a single sell-contained individual.
While the teen-ager sorts
things out, his peers are of
tremendous importance, and
it is by them he or she is in·
traduced to marijuana.
One 18-year·old boy troced
his own experience this way :
" I first started smoking poL
when I was in the 9th grade. I
was aware that people • moked

lH' 27m
CE NTURY !

pot but I never was invited. I
wasn't really concerned about
it - besides the fact that I
was not invited.
" I first smoked with a
friend I had met earlier that
year. He invited me over to his
house alter school. I didn't
know he smoked until he
brought out his stash lhis pol
supply). Needless to say I was
intrigued by the mystique of a
substance that altered your
outlook on life and made
things seem Ieos painful, and a
lot more humorous . He rolled
a joint and we smoked it... I
wu thrilled to have done it. I
felt a little older and wioer and
very pleased with my11elf lor

being invited to ·party' with
someone. Up to that time I
wasn 't all that popular.
" I think that somewhere
along the line I started think ·
ing that people who smoked
pot were more appealing to
other people their age because
of tho new and totally dif·
lerenl thing they were doing.
They seemed to be freer and
happier to be around. People
that age (9th grade ,
remember) are very ready to
get a lot of 'friendo' and to
have them beside them for
security. and maybe muscle,
who knows?
" Later on in the 9th grade I
started to smoke more, by
friends' invite. By the end of
the 9th grade I started buying
pot myself, and other people I
was familiar with started
also."
The parents didn't know, of
course. The peer-backed form
of entertainment persisted until it was out of hand, and
ochool «rades began to drop,
attention lagged and there
were frequent outburots of
anger.
When tho parents lack con·
viction over hOw firm to be
with their youngsters, they
create an attitudinal and
power vacuum, and there are a
lot of, temporary lriendo, the
peers, who are ready to walk
in and fill it.
The belance of power between parent and peer is clear·
ly in the parent 's favor. if the
parent takes the time and effort to lay down guideline•
and stand by them . In another
article, we will dei!Cribe how
oome parents got together to
make full use of parent power.
But even if parents act
alone, they ohou ld eotabliah
clear control on tho question
of drugs . It is not the chlld'a
right to choose.
Cop)'Tiaht

"'-·

1111!1. The Ao-latod

NEXT: Liuing with Acne.

If she ever has a chance

toqet a word

Clovia!

inedqewise'

·-

WINNIE
) Q U Rft. LLY

5URPR IGED '\IE WITH
lOUR DECI9itJN TO

WHY THE

) QU

9UDDEN

IOLD ~ IE ..\NY-

HAVE N T,

THING

Al30UT

IJtli&gt;EAMS.'

GO TO OOUT H
•·\M ER ICA WITH

1 P!DN T WANT TO

16 lCIVCDHARTTOHART Jonathan
and Jennifer Ha r1 gel ca ught in a
tang l ed w e b o1 murder s tretching
!r om New Yor k to Ca lifor nia when a
bn degr oo m "S ab ru pt departure
leaves th e br id e a lo ne to !ace a pair
of bri.Jt a lthugs . {Bopaat ; 60 mins.}
111) NEWS
10' 15 l 9 I MOV1E -(SUSPENSE-DRAMA)
••• " The Birds" 1963
10 o2B 13 1 CBN UPDATE NEWS
10:30 t l ) FAITH20
111) TWILIGHT ZONE
10o45 15 I LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
10,58 13 ) CBN UPDATE NEWS
" ' oo r 2 1
cs1 ®l
NEWS
l 3l TODAY IN BIBLE PROPHECY
( $ ) NIGHT GALLERY
11,28 ( 3) CBN UPDATE NEWS
11 ,30 12 10 ( 7 ) THE TONIGHT SHOW
'Th p Bos l ol Carson · Hos t : Johnny
Car son Gue s t s: Ca rnac, Buddy
Hoc kett , L arry Gall m. {Re poa 1; 60

QU fNT ENOU0H T O
1\ENTION . . . UNTIL

CON51.1El0 GOT
HERE.'

131Ll Y.

m

line " 1980

WORRY YOU .. . AND

rHEY JVEREN T FRE -

wm

o c•H' l o

BAHNEY
'1

VISITIN' TIME IS

I

OVER, SNUFFY

1

I
I

·'
PEANUTS

h iS ptt!le nl s

HERE'S THE WORLD WAR [
FL'iiNG ACE ZOOM ING
THROUGH THE AIR IN
HIS SOPWITH CAMEL ...

THOSE POOR BLIGHTER5
DOWN THERE IN THE
TRENCHES HATE ME

--:~l)

f~

~ &amp;-.~\

L-~ --\

t

.J -

\.,.' .
c

, ,

TH E'!' THINK J f.IAVE
IT EA5'{ UP 'HERE .

Tl-115 ISN'T A 74 7
. 'IOU kNOW!

11 ,4 5

.

12 o00

(,~ l

'

.• i.. •

.'

1_: ,.

l

•

11 1'•
1 :; .H

(101MOVIE -(COMEDY) •••.~a " I'd
Rather Be Ric h' ' 1964
I 41 THECAN01DCANDIDCAMER·
A 1\ I.J rl i Uri I l lllv O I ~ fi ll over t he
r l Hm h ) h l c.1 tc h !he un suspoc llng
11\ 110f ).' ~ ll ' C' Il i i O U !I Si!uat lon8.
6 1\12' ID TUESDAY MOVIE Of
THE W EEK r . nr c £1 1 l akewoo d
M,l ll&lt; ' t
19 !9 S t a1s Suzanne
So n1 v 1 ~ Hub c• t Fo~&lt; worl~l
• 41 MOVIE ·(ORAMA) •• ' ' My Bril'•l nl Career · 1980
• 0
7 "TOMORROW COAST·
I 0 CO AST t •• l•' "'l Arwnn iN Ralph
I ' . ...

•

0

lJ I

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise an swer. as sug·
gested by the abOve car1oon.

I 1I I I I

Answer: [

I ·I 1 )

J[

(Answer's tomorrow).

I

Jumbles: WOMEN
Answer:

SKULL EQUATE BICKER

Th ey were holding drinks at the acl'obats'

pa rly- "TUMBLER S"

'

Jumble Book No. 16, containing 1tO puzzles, Is available lor 11.75 poetplld
hom Jumble, clo thla oewspaper, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648. Include your
name, addresa, zip code and make cheeks payable to Newapepelbooka.

BRIDGE
Senseless play sinks slam
decla rer to follow when he is
in a slam contrac t.
South wasted no time m
NORTH

J-1\1·81

hastening to lose hos slam . As
he expla ined slowly and careful ly after lhe axe fell , it was
rea ily bad luck. but somehow

~ A K 53

.Q6
• 7642
73

+.J

or other the exJllanation feB

tKJ9 :1

.J

+I09H64

+ 52

EAST

WEST
. 74
. 82

on deaf ea ts as far as North

was concerned. East and West

+ 10 9 !62 .
10 95

accepted it gracefully .
South won the club lead,
eashed his quee n and jack of
spade·s . He then entered dummy with the queen of hearts .
di scardc~ his queen-ten of diamonds on the ace-king of
spa des and started on the rest
of the heart suit.
East held fou r heart s and
the la st spade and had to get
those two tricks.
Do you see how South could
have made the slam7
Fatrly easy. At trick lour he.
should have played low hearts
from both the North and South
hands . Thi s would have cost

t8 5

SOUTH
+QJ

.AK 7 13
t A Q 10

+AKQ
Vulnera ble: Both
Dealer: South

,.,

Wes t

Nor1h

East

South

Pass
Pass

2+
6 NT

PaSs

3 NT

Pass

Pass

Pass

Opening lcad :. lO

him

a

30

point

overtrick

against a 3-3 heart break. but
gi\•en him 1440 pomts for
making a slam against the
five spade:four heart combi·

By Oswald Jacob y
and Alan Sontag

.nation he was up against.

··Haste ma k ~s wasle·· cer·
ta inly is a good adage for

!NEWSPAPE R EN TERPRISJ.o.: ASSN.)

~uw~t~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

3 Wagnerian
lady
to absorb
4 Kakar
5 Compa ct
or sambar
10 Metal-ware
5 Beetle
11 Of the sea
Bailey's
1% Cathedral
nemesis
6 Mountain
section
1l Satiric
I prefix l
Yesterday's AD8wer
14 Mien
7 Rubdown
16 Give
product
20 LUke
26 Delaware's
- whirl
8 Start
Skywalker
capital
17 "Playhouse 9 Pours
film
28 Frolic •
90 " producer 11 North
21 Salt (Fr. )
3llncline
18 60 sees .
Dakota .
22 "- of
32 Pa . city
19 Caucasus
city
La Mancha" 33 Swiss hero
native
15 Uke
23 Superintend 34 Anecdote
22 - pac ker
a cupcake 24 Golfer,
36 Cereal
23 Chose
19 Managed
Jerry plant (obs.)
r;--;.;--r;--r;-24 Wheezes
25 - cutlet
26 Uterary
giant
27 Be wrong
28 Nonsense
2ll Bleak
30 Late actor,
- Sloane
35 Go llungry
31 Region
38 More ghostly
39 Type
of factory
40 Ford dynasty 1-=+--+member
41 Soccer great
I Fail

1-=+~-4-~~-

DOWN

1 Wild guess
2 Rhode Is·
land's motto

OAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

nuns .)

13 I ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
{ 5) MOVIE -(ADVENTURE) •••
" Desert Fox " 1951
ABC NEWS
l 8 l l121 CD
N1GHTLINE
0 ( 6 I CBS LATE MOVIE L OU
GR ANT C onfl1 c 1' S tar~ : Edward
A:sntl r. Ro ber t Wal den. Mr s .
Pynchon tolls report er Joe Rossi to
knop an oye out to r 1mpropr1elies at
1t1c Tnbb ul shed oes n·t realiZ9 how
hu he wrll go . (R epeBtl 'SC ALPEL '
197 8 St nr s. Robert L ansing , Judith
Chapm a n When the mi ssi ng
dlliJQ htc r a t a plilSIIC surgeon is tell
n to n un o b y her \)lnndlalhar . the
ln Hl or dtH.:adcS IO Sllbstitu.te one 01

~

tEXLUDE!

Yesterday·s

( 5 ) ALLIN THE FAMILY
( 6 l ©J CD FAMILY FEUD
( 7) TV HONOR SOCIETY
0 Ca l TIC T AC DOUGH
( 9) (t V
MACNEIL-LEHRER
REPORT
(!QJ NEWS
7,30 ffi ll BULLSEYE
( 3} FAITH THAT LIVES
( 5l NBA BASKETBALL Atlanta
Hawks vs Chicago Bulls
( 6) 0 ( 8] JOKER'S WILD
( 7) HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
(p)lllJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
(jQ) MATCH GAME
(1ZJ (El FACE THE MUSIC
7,59 (3J CBN UPDATE NEWS
8:00 f2)D LOBO P re ttygirl~,poslngas
l adies in distress, act esdecoystOr
a car theft ring; L obo and his depu·
li'es Qo und ercover t o cras h th e
oeerati on . (60-min s .)
( 3) ORAL ROBERTS
.
r4l MOVIE -(DRAMA) • • "Carny "
1980
.
(J )'@ (El HA~PVDAYS
['f) 0 ( S) l1ID BILLY GRAHAM
CRUSADE
( ~ ) NOVA 'The Asteroid and the
Dinosaur" For 150 millionyears,din·
o saur s dominated the earth. Then ,
6 SmiU1onyears ago , they suddenly
va nished. along with a great deal of
the p"lan et 's animal and plant life .
NOVA exami nes a remarkable new
the ory abo ut th e cause ot theca ·
Ia st rOphe in whic h the first clue to
th e sokJii on w as a piece of clay .
(Closed -Ca pt ioned ; U.S .A.}
(1U TOGETHER ... WITH LEO BUSCAGLIA Spe a k ing bef ore an
audienc e in Sacrame nto. Cahfor ·
111a . Dr Leo Buscag lia urges his lis ·
te nors to move away from the cur rent vog ue o tt he ' me generation',
and in to th e !oving real ity of c lose
lies with fami ly , husbands and
wiv es , children and g rand parents .
His simple message: ' Together ness is ma de in heaven , but must b e
!!_racticed o n earth .'
8' 30 [ 3 ) GOOD NEWS
( 6 ) ~~) (El LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY
Lavern e a nd Shirl ey attempt arias IOund ing ca pe r by e ntering the ir
boss ' high -security office to re tri.eve a na ughty note th ey penned
b eya use thoy didn 't get a raise .
8o58 •
CBN UPDATE NEWS
C2J 0 (7) BJANDTHEBEAR
( 3 ) 700 CLUB
C'l @ CD THREE'S COMPANY
Ac ci d ent -prone Cindy appears t o
have taken the ul1imate misstep
whenshe starts co llec ting materni ·
ty cloth es. leading Jac k to make an
as ton 1Sh1ngJy tunny proposal.
(Ci ose d ·Capt ione d : U.S.A.)
0 I OJ (10) CBS TUESDAY MOVIE
OF THE WEEK 'Hellinger's Law '
t 981 Star s : Tal ly Sava las, Rod
Tay lor.
.
( 9) Gil MYSTEAYI ' Rumpole and
the Fascist Beasr A staunch ad ·
voca te of lr ee speec h , Aumpole
accepts th e def ense of Capt in Rex
Parkin, c harg ed with inciting a riot
under Brita in's Ra ce Relations Act
(Cl ose d -Capt ioned ; U.S.A.)
9 o30 l •) @ CD TOO CLOSE FOR COMFORT The r evea ling uniform Sara
wea rs tor h er now job as a waitress
is a sensat io n l or the male clientele
allh c rcS ta uront ,but spar k sl ather ·
ly shock Rnd reb ellion in Henry.
9, 45 ( 51 TBSEVENINGNEWS
TOoOO 1210 ( 7) FLAMINGO ROAD Lane
Ballou a ccompan1os Sam CUrtis to
Miami. bu t is fr ightened into hurry ·
mg back to Truro oll or shomeetsari
old acquamtance who informs her
th at thre e peopl e with whom they
sha red a se cret have mysteri ously
died. (60 mins .)
( 4} MOVIE -(DRAMA) •• "Border-

'~ · ·

tJ

rl:~

1

Ia

AXYDLBAAXR
I.ONGFELl.OW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used fo r the three 1.'!1, X for the two O'S:, etc. Single letters. .

apostrophes, the lengt h anrl formation of the words are all
hinl s. Earh doy the rode letters are different.

CRYPTOQUOTES
S Y UX D
Y

XN

DSLKYO

YHO

YD

Y
JQ

TYUEK;
XD

EYND

AK

KIKLM
AK

AKYIK
OYM,

TYHHJD

U I.KY C
XD . - SJLYTK
GYHH
Yesterday's Cryptoquole : WHEN DINING WITH TilE DEVILONF.MUST USE A LONG SPOON .- B!SMARCK

SUNNY OUTLOOK
WASHINGTON (AP) - Several million homes will
be using solar energy in the next two decades, according to a prediction by the U.S. Department of
Energy.
At present there are more than 40,000 solar homes in
the United SLHtes.

�"
Ohio

Students collect for. A CS
Two st•Jdents collected $51 for the
American Cancer ·Society in the
"Send-a-Mouse to College" project
for Pomeroy Elementary School.
They are Carolyn Elam, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Jackie Elam, Route
4, Pomeroy; and Kimberly Calvert,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Calvert, East Main Street,
Pomeroy. Carolyn is a fourth grade
student of Mrs. Bonnie Fisher and
Kim is in Miss Tate's filth grade.
Both girls were presented " I Sent A
Mouse to College" T-shn-ts by April
Smith, school secretary· and Cancer
Society secretary, at an assembly
Tuesday.
Others receiving T-shirls from the
Metgs County Chapter of American
Cancer Society were : Rachael
Hawley, kindergarden student who
collected a total of $24.4B: hi~hest

ASTROGRAPH

collectors in grade one were Josh
Bartels with $7.69 and Jeremy Dean
with $10.25; grade two were Tedd
Wiles with $10.24 and Robbie Fields
with $3.50; third graders were John
Michael Logan with collections of
$5.69 and Tommy Werry with $10.07;
those from grade four collecting the
most money were Kenda Kloes with
$6.40 and Miss Elam; grade five
high collectors were Miss Calvert
and Lisa Patterson with $17 .85; ·in
grade six the highest collections
were made by Greg Fields with $2.04
and Ruth Powell with $16.03; in the
L. D. class Eugene Aleshire won
with $3.72, EMR winners were Dee
Shan~ with 82 cents and Robin
Qualls with $6.26.
The total collected by the students
was $506.29.

Mar; lt 11, illi

l

LEO IJII1y IS-Auc. tzl Take advantage of
any lUJOrtuniUes you have today to attend
gatheifnga where you might meet new
peOple. There's a gOOd chl.nce you'll male a
vtduabJe contact.

Th~ comm~~: year jotnt ventures art likely
tO prove !UOrl;' prOfitable for )'OU than

situations or en terprises which you apprOach
on your own. This should be especially true
when! another already has a strong start.

Help wanted
Helen's Beauty Shop Is GET VALUABLE training
, proud to announce that as a young business person

1

rnay not apJM!ar so at first, chan~otes fo1sted
upon you by others today could pron very
fortWUtle for you in the long nm. Don't buck
trends. F'md out more about the yea r

foll owing your birthday by sending for your
Astro-Grapll, Mail U for each to Astr()Graph, P 0 Sox 4t9 , Radio C1ly Stallbn,
New Vurk, N Y. 10019 Be s u~ to specify btr·
thdate.
ARI&amp; !March ZI·Aprtl ltl Your luck
should !.Hke H turn for the better now, regar·
dingWeas or proposals you've been trying to
sell to the bOss Lily ~rn on the hne to him

onl'l! a.:ain todt~y .
TAURUS (April to-May 201 TOOay you're

li kely to be luckier In financial or materUJl
mhttus where partners are involved instead
o( in things which you atlempt to do on your
'~

11

."•.

' Gwen Folmer has joined and eirn good money plus

; Tournament,

May

•Call991·5574 after 6 p.m. ·

Baton Lessons. S!yietle
, Baton Corp. 11"91Siratlon
~ and

lessons start Wed

' March 11 at 5:30 at SenlcW
•Citizens Center, Mulberry
Heights. Ages 4 to 18. $10.00
month. Contest Twirling
and Parade Marching 1·
304-675·1999
.
Glvuway

4

;Give away to gOOd home.

Cute

cuddly

puppies.

Father Is a border collie,
mother Is mediuM sized

rou

dog. 992-7574 after S p.m .

PINEWOOD DERIIY WINNERS - The annual pinewood derby of
Chesler
CUb Stout Pack 235 was held Saturday with Joe Saunders, Scott
'
Starcher and Eric Sim, left to right, being the first place winners. Starcher also won lbe first place overall award. BUI Slm, Frank Newsome,
Larry Lee lind Jell Saunders were the judges.

f:

Small investment, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads~
with Major

Public Notice

l

HUNTINGTON , W. Va .
Representatives from Marshall
University will meet informally with
students from Porn! Pleasant,
Wahama and Hannan high schools in
Mason County and Gallia Academy
in Gallipolis on Wednesdsy , March
II, at 4 p.m. at the Mason County
Library in Point Pleasant.
Discussing Marshall's various
programs, student life, admissions
procedures and financial aid opportunities with the students will be
Sandy Cooper, admissions counselor, along with representatives
from the Fmancral Aid and Student
Mfairs offices.
"Anyone interested in Marshall not just high school students - is
welcome to attend the meeting, "
Mrs. Cooper sard. Coordinating
arrangements for the informational
session is BrU Barker, Mason County
MU Alwnni Chapter president.

;
SECOND PL,4CE WINNERS In the pinewood derby were Rod
; Newsome, David Casto, Timmy Clark, and Floyd Ridenour, left to right.
~ Ridenour also won the second place overall In the derby. Others par: tlclpating were Brian Bailey, Chris LaDeaux, Todd and Tony Lee, David
.· King, Mony Wood, Jay Reynolds, Jason Saunders, Terry Newsome, and
, Michl King.
'

:Polly's Pointers
'

/)isposal
smells
.

''

By Polly Cramer
Special correspondent
, DEAR POLLY - A lot of my
·small baby's formula goes down the
lkitchen sink and I ·
'have noticed a
:b8d odor coming
:rrom the disposal.
;I have scrubbed it
·inside and under
rubber flaps,
;but the odor
rremains. What is
;the best cleanser
Cramer
rto use?- D. C.
: DEAR D. C. - Have you tried run:ning a tray of ice cubes through your.
:disposal? The following letter from
•Ethel has some good suggestions. !POLLY
I DEAR POLLY- To keep my garbage disposal smelling nice I pour
some baking soda in it about once a
:imonth. I also put in lemon or orange
peelings when I have them. Mter
" such a treatment I clean the side and
:: underneath the rim with a bottle
:• brush. -ETHEL
;: DEAR POLLY- When putting on
;: a sweater with a zipper in the back,
·: turn the sweater around, zip it up
1and then tum it around the right
• way.- ANN ELLA
: (Polly's Note: Do not put your ar: rns in the sweater sleeves until the
; sweater is zipped up.)

:the

:!

DEAR POLLY - I am answering
Mrs. G. W., who asked about
hanging. sweaters on wrre hangers.
For years I have stretched an old
terry cloth hand towel across the
hanger and wrapped the ends
around the ends of the hanger, then
fastened them wtth safety pins. This
is done so the pins do not come in
conta~ with the sweater yarn and
pull any threads. - K.O.D.
DEAR POLLY - My shower sta ll
is very small and does not have any
place to put shampoo bottles, etc. I
.hooked a piastre hanging pot, with
drainage holes, on to the side of the
shower and this is really handy, as it
has room enough for two bottles.
Also, I spray oven cleaner on stuDborn greasy pots and pans and have
no scrubbing. - GLORIA
(Polly's Note : Do wear rubber
'
gloves.)
DEAR POLLY - Do tell Mrs.
W.A.S., who has a problem with
steamy kitchen windows, that when
vegetables, etc. begin to boil I lower
the heat and cover the pans to solve
that problem. - ROSELYN
Polly will send you one of her
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column. Write POLLY'S POINTERS in care of this newspaper.

'

: World Day of Prayer service
; presented by Mrs. Mary Shuler
LETART FAL!l&gt; ~ "Of Such is
the Kingdom" was the topic of the
world day of prayer and self-denial
service presented by Mrs. Mary L.
$huler at the Wednesday night
ineetlng of the United Methodist
·Women at the home of Mrs. Chlorus

Grimm.
; Emphasis of the program was on
pte 1fOrds which Jesus spbke to the
dilclples as they gathered around
Him. She stressed that we should
give special consideration to
children this year as she read
,"Children and the Kingdom." Mrs.
'Grimm read "Children Need Love"
~Mrs. Inez Hill read "A Child is

munications were read and a
telephone ·call was received during
the meeting from Mrs. Kitty Allen
Skeels of Columbus, a former
resident of Letart Falls and a member of the Methodist Church and the
United Methodist Women. Mrs.
Skeels talked via long distance with
each of the members attending the
meeting.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Grirrun and Mrs. Cross from a
table centered with a green and
white a!Tangement in the St.
Patrick 's Day theme. Next meeting
will be on Aprill.

LoviJil."

Mrs. Nora Cross, co-hostess for

'1M meeting,

gave devotions using
ICI'lpture from Matthew 19 and a
.illedltation on the world day of

Prayer.
, !)wing the business meeting a
~

of 23 shut-in visits was repor-

ted. Thank cOntainers netted $8.10

l'or

the ~Bury. Several com-

PHALIN HOSPITALIZED
Doug Phalin, Pomeory, who was
injured in an auto accident last week
is a patient at Camden-Clark
Hospital in Parkersburg, W. Va.,
where he has undergone hip
surgery. He will be confined to the
hospital for about two weeks. Cards
may be sent to Room 407-N.

RACINE

Management opportunity
open; _.For free lnfomation

Call after 5 to 61&gt;7 6372 .

YOuR

PIANO .

LOST . Fomoly pet. Large

male black &amp; white cat An·
swers to Bandit. Mid·

dleport, 6th 51. area. 992·
2S31. Reward .

Too

1981.

' -_
-11
n __-__
_I . - ---:--- 1
3. _ _ _ _ __
4. _ _ _ _ __

_

5. _ _ _ _ __
6 _ _ _ _ _ __
7. _ _ _ __ __

B. _ _ _ __

_

··-------

10. _ _ _.:..__ __

II . _ _ _ _ _ _ __

12 . _ _ _ _ _ __
1 3 · --~---14. _ _ _ _ _ __

13. _ _ _ _ __
14 _ __ _ _ __
25 _ _ _ _ _26. _ _~---

====

(3J 10, ltc

Tired of penny pinching??
Housewives and mother~ ,
change spare t1me into$$$$
F lex ible hours, exc.::ellent
earnings, fr ee wardrobe .
ca,.d of Thanks
- .........___ - Two even ings a week . For
l w is h to thank everyone more information call 99::!·
who sent me cards and 3941 or ~9 · 4535'
flowers Wh1/e I was in
Vetera n s
Memor 1al
Hosp1ta/ and everyone at Decorated cakes for all oc·
Veterans
Memor1 al cassions. Character cakes.
Hospital whO cared for me sheet cakes, and weddi ng
Most ot all the 3 to 11 shift cakes. Call 992 6342 or 992
crew that I work with who 2583.
got me two gr ea t gifts
which I apprecia te very
much Thanks to each and
GET l'OOR- W1'T1I A
everyone of them from th e
'
bottom of my heart.
Sarah Lunsford

-

bands , d iamonds . Gold or

Vacancy.

laundry

elderly. 992-6022.

the

perlenced. 992·7314 .

Will do wallpapering. 992·
3760.
13

·\ ,

Insurance

AUT ,O MOBILE
SURANCE been

IN ·
can·

c elle.d?
Lost
your
OPeratdr's license? Phone

992·2Ul.
11

wanted to Do

Furnace repa irs, electrical
work, plumbing, mobile
hom• ~ 'Or residence. 992·
5858. 0

Cuddle Twins!

&amp; AUCI ! OII

I1 - HIIp wjjnltll
U - SIIUjjl.ci W.lnlttl

u ... susineu Tr1 l nm1,1
u - scnooll lnUruc lion
l i-

Rilld to, T V

tl - Houuttold Cioocfl

TV , ~jjiiiOEQUipmtnl
U - Anhquu
,S4- M1t&lt; Mtrch1nd1U
U - IIHidtnt Supp ii U
u - ttett tor hlt

to small. Will buy one piece

or complete households .
Martin's General Store at

991-6370.

11 _ ,..,m l!qulpmenl
t1- Wtnltd IO luy

e FINANCIAL
11 -

n - Trudu lor hit

JJ- Proltsl lonll

14- HIY &amp; Ori•n
u - Seed &amp; Ferlll• ur

lus lneu
OpPQrluntty
U - Money to LO.I"

Now buy ing gold and
silver, old pocket watches.
chains, diamonds, silver
money and coins Martin's

U - Lt'lltSIO&lt;k

Servo&lt;at

General Store. Middleport .
992·6370.

eTRANSPORTATION

eREAL ESTATE

11 - AUIOs tOr Silt
1l- VInl &amp; 4 W. O
14- MO!ItcyC IU

J I - Hom et tor Ulel
H - Mob1lt Homu
lor 5111
ll - Fum\ to r S/jlif

151Auto Part\
' I Ae&lt;IUOrlfl
71 - Auto Rlllllr

H- Bus inus lu1ld 1n!t
H - LotsiAcnagt
Jt - Rul E111111e Win ltd
l i- I!UIIors

eSERIIICES

Want· Ad Ad\lertising

o .. dllnes

secretary needed for con ·

strucllon field office. Apply
In person to BOb campbell,
Ontario Plplng ,Second
Street, Racine, Ohio 45771.

11- Hometmprovtmtnts
12- Piumlllntl !ueullne

U - 1 \CIVIII"'
.,.- •toctrlu t

&amp; llltlrlt~ratlon

1 30 P .M , Da1t~
12 NOOil hturdiV
lor MondiY

11- 0onlrl l H1ullnt
11- M H . lhpel r
IJ- Uphollttry,

WANTED: 3 ~eople to sell
Avon . Call 741·2354 or 742·
2755.

15 Wordl or Under
1 dey

c.. ,.

..'·"'"..

2 days

....

l days
• 111~1

Babysitter wanted In my
home . 7:30 a.m.·6 p.m. r:au
after 6:30, 992-6133.

en.,,.

. ..

I. U

Some part time lobs In Pt.

us

Pleasant

In mtmory , Card ol

with

a

age 17 or older, a 1un1or or

1 11nk~ 1nt:1 Obit1.1ery 6 Ullll ,., Wlrtl, u •..:

mlnunum . Clift In jjdl!llnu .
Mo~lll Hor"' l lifl tiMII V;~rd lltlfl lrt ill CUPit• Oft I~ With catt\ Wltftl
prdltf, H coni cnartt tor Us urrylnt lo• Numltr• tn Cart ot Ttl•
Stnt•ntl.

"

come

$1.500 bOnusf Plus free
college lultlont If you are

l .7f

11&lt;11 word ov1r tht minimum IJ wordt ll 4 unu Mrword ,., dl¥ .
Alii runn lnt Olhor 111111n conU(Uiivt day1 will IN ChlrtH atthtlfay.

""

EAFORD[B
VIRGIL B. SR. n

-' 110 ~

Phone
1-(614)·9?2-3325
WELL PLANNED - 8

rm . frame home . 1620
sq ft. and large lot

144x220, has 2 tub baths,

nat. gas furnace with at·
tached wood burner, full
basement and 2 car
garage on State Rt. near
stores and schools .
NEW LISTING - 7
acres
in
Rutland
Township . Has old gas
welL Leading Ck . water
and a smal house for on ·

ly s 11,500.
NEW LISTING -

21

acres in Olive Twnshp .

on good State Rt. Lots ol
locust

and

~

senior In high school, or a
high
school diploma
graduate, you may qualify .
The west Vlrplnla Netlonel
Guard Is no ord!hary part
lime iObl Good pay, ;ooc:J
beneflls! For details call
SFC O'Neol675·l950'.

11etrtg~r•1or

St1ll a lew new Kerosene

minerals

leased Asking 515,000.

r ight for a family . Chein
link fence, aluminum
siding, 4 bedrooms. 2
baths, nat. gas furnace.
dr.lled well, T . P. water
available . Nice and neat

acre trlliler site In
sout.1ern District . Has a
driveway and is land ·
scaped to accommodate

a mobrle hOme. JUST!

$J ,SOO

ALEXANDER SCHOOL
D!STRICT - A big 7

room home with 4
bedrooms, eQuipped kif·
chen, enclosed porch, 3
storage build ings, and 4

big

lots .

remodeled .

Recentl v
ON LV I

$26,900.
A NICE STREET IN
MIDDLEPORT - is the
perfect place for a fam1 ·
ly and this two story
house with a full base·
ment has lots of room . It
has a large kitchen with
lots of storage, a dining
room and 3 bedrooms,
Hoose is in excellent

condition. 542,600 .
PRETTY
BACK

VAA:Dt And a one floor

plan

house

with

3

bedrooms . Has a full
ba~ement and a screen·
ed In porch. Needs some

work. AS I( IN G $27,000,
A REAL BARGAIN! -

This 2 bedroom home
comes with an equipped

kitchen. fronl

He11ters
ti9.U
1 Only New 0!1 Slove Closeou t.
5.1'11!

l\SO . OO
All ot lfte •bovt&gt; 1tems in 111

tellen1 tondilion . All are prlud

two bedrooms, new carpet.
1972 Champion, 11x 60, two
bedrooms, new carpet. 1976
Cameron. 12 .: 60, two

to

bedrooms. all electric. 1971

Skyline, 12sx 6), two
bedrooms, blllth &amp; '!J, new

carpet .

POMEROY,O.
9'12-2259
NEW LISTING - 1.25

jj~=:;::IIIC:hllt
Quills
ii
Quiltint

Repossessed
Items

pet. 1911 Cameron, 14 x 64,

1'970

porch.

din ing room and Is In

pretty good condition.
JUST I $11.000.
REALTOR
Henrv E. Cleland, Jr.

992-6191
ASSOCIATES

J un Trussell 949·2660

Roger &amp; Dollie Turner
992-5692
OFFI(E 992-2219

s~ll

lmmed•-'•etv see us to·

'" ·

POMEROY

~LANDMARK
_,

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
GRAVEL Y- WIIk
bahiN:I I
riding ln&lt;IOrs. ttu1h &amp; self· pro .
mowers.
SNAPPER - Pu1h a tell pro .
mt~wers , riding tr•&lt;Tors .
ATLAS- Tillers

WEED EATER-Brush &lt;ufl~f I
lnmmen
STIHL - Brush cutters &amp; lrim ·

12 x 60, two bedrooms, new

2nd x Viand Street, Potnt
Pleasant, WV Phone 615·
«24.

1969 PMC l bedroom
trailer. 12x60. 992·39H.

eluded. 55500.00 247·3942.

5&gt;~6~_...!:
P_.,et,_,se!f-"o'r "-Sa"l"'e_ _
come get a beaut ifu l puppy
from
your
Humane
Society. All sizes , labs,
coli ies, poodles , setters
looking tor homes. 99::1·6260.

Kuker 400 gal spray; Int.

1971

Dunham

snap on 15.5x38 dual tires ;

Home . lst trailer
Harrisonv i lle Rd
3S

on

•
•
•
•

Backhoe
E•cavating
Septic Systems
Water, Sewer &amp; Gas
Lines
Licensed &amp; Bonded

DUMP TRUCK
Ph. 992-7201
3 5·1 mo .

Lots &amp; Acreage

992·5869.

-~-

1976

1~72

Six room house and bath
with util itv room . Citv
water and gas. $150.00 per
month with SSO.OO deposit .
Located on Nye Ave. Call

bed,.oom

Plymouth

Ford Galaxre 500 four

Trucks for Sale

1979 DODGE D50, like new
mob1 le cond. 54,600. 992-2882 .

$175.00 per month, S51l oo 73
1/ans &amp; 4 W.O.
deposit 367·7811 .
1978 Ford F250 4 wheel
i

Apartmenf
for Rent
-

super cab, all extras,

good cond. 742·1068.

·949·2862
949·2160

-·-------

rent . 9'12·5908

81
Home
___1mprovements

Two or three bedroom fur ·
nished or unfurnished
apartment, located 1n the
Warner Bu ilding, at 117
West
Second
Street,

Gene' s Carpet Cleaning ,
deep stream extraction .
Free
estimated ,
reasonable rates, scot·

chquard. 9'12·6309 or 7&lt;2
Pomeroy, Ohio. 992· 2117 or 2211 .
992·2528 after 5.
-...-··-- --- - - _,,__w+
WILL DO ALL kinds ot ca r
45
Furnished Rooms
work, includ ing

·-

---

W. 11\0

Ph. 614-843-2591

DENNEY
CHAIN LINK
FENCE
KEN SOLES

u r r~

245-9113

• &lt;OII!Pit l t lint ot Brown·

lnt 5por1lng Goodt.

2·19-tfc

CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes- extensive remodeling
• E lectrica I work
• Roofing work
12 years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
2·23·1 mo.

82

-~-------

ceilings, repair!,
Sleeping rooms; by the
xperi ence d, With
week .
Kitchen,
and etc .
television lounge . Carryout references. Pho"e 992 ·3941 .
store and restaurant within
Will do carpenter work and
500 leet. 992-6370.
interior or exterior pa in·
---·

--

Residential &amp; Light
Commercial Electrical
$• 1 oplies
oualitv Products
Reasonable Prices

992 -7544
VA loans no money down
Federal Housing 3% on S'25,000
S% on balance.
Conventional LoansS%
down
Call for Information

992·7S44

Bedford Township
and
Flatwoods Area
ss.oo Per Month
weekly Pickup
(4

Bags L1mit Per Week)

PHONE 992-7802
or 992 7443
213-lmo ·

'

JOYCE ELECTRICAL
SUPPLIES

College Rd.
Syracuse,

Oh .

Ph. 992-3804
2·23·1 mo.

1·21 ·tfc

HART'S
TRASH HAULING

Plumbing
&amp; Heatin

WATER

ELECTRICAL
SUPPLIES

CUNNINGHAM
&amp;,ASSOC.
Mortgage Bankers

2·-t ·tfc

ROUSH

-~

.~

Ill. 3, Box 54 ·
Racine, Oh.

2·15 1 mo .

--

Auto Parts
3 AND 4 RM furniShed ap· 76
&amp; Acces!ories
ts Phone 991·5434.
1978 420 HP Ford Thun·
Unfurnished one bedroom derblrd motor , 16 ,000
apartment for rent . Ren · miles $125 .00 . Phone 667
ters ass1stance available 6372 aJer 5 .
'
for senior citizens. Contact
VIllage Manor Apartments
at992·7787.
Four room apartment for

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Domestic, Japanese &amp;
European cars &amp;
Trucks.

tormtl lrul t09fl•llg 1h011

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard

fur ·

bedroom
near Cheshire .

44

west Co. Rd. 18.
Pomeroy ,Oh. 45769

llf0WN1NG Wo•k. lukont . nunhng or
lll"lnt DCICI!i. AIIO Pn1·,hu volt, CIUII,

All tvpcs of root work ,
new or repat,. gutters
and downspouts. gutter
c1ean1ng and patnting .
All wurk guaranteed.

S60 . 2nd tra ller on the rlghl

19i0 Honda Civic. 1,700
miles, Sl,850. 1979 Pinto
24,000 miles, $1 ,750. 376·
2 bedroom Mobile Home. 6384 .

Three
home,

.

Sizes from 4x6 to 12x40

WC" ou., lor s•lt, To~ q~ fil t~ b0o1s •nol
thoe\ . lr1ncl n1mu hht:

ROOFING

Valore

nished. Deposit required.
Adults preferred . 992·2749

992·1324

Utility· Buildings

Call992·3421

Kingsbury Rd ., 2 mi.

Free Estimates

H. L WRITESEL

door , air condit ioning ,
power steenng , in ex
cel tent condition $395 .00 .
Phone 742·3010 or can see
on Leading Creek Road . _
1974 C~evy Impala, 350
auto. First S700 buys it .
Also 5 h.p. Br~ggs · Straten,
new last spring, side shaft .

Adulls only
Brown 's
Trailer Court, Minersville. 12

SMAll

• Golt Ltnonl For A11 Agu

Pomeroy, Oh.

mobile Wolf Pen Rd. off 143.

completely

SiltS

"From 30x30"

5ped•lltll

V.C. YOUNG II

Autos tor Sate

949·2860.
Houses tor Rent

'

~u, ,

wagon, air conditioning,
etc , very ni ce . S1500 00.
Glen Bissell at 949·2801 or

41

~

Farm Buililings

Body Repair · Insurance
work · ColliSIOn Repair.
E.:Pert painting, body
work, pinstriptng &amp;
vinyl tops.
Free Estimates

•Snorl G1m1

(Free Estimate•)

........... ,., .... .
• ..._ . . . . . . ....

ALLSTEEL

C;u11pRd'
Chuter , Oh

992-6215 or 992-7314

71

3·::1 · 1 mo .

${0~1

remOdeling
- Roofing and gutter
work
-Concrete work
-Plumbing and
e1ectric11 work

Fairgrounds. $4000.00. 992· 3891.

lots, Eastern District, Tup·
pers Plains Chester water ,
Owner will help finance .

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

10 7-tfc

-Addonsand

Two large mare ponies, one
TRAILER LOT for sale, pinto,
one bay . Seven men·
$4,000.00 . 992 2571 .
th old filly, three fourths
appolossa, lead broke and '
·Acreage : One acre and one gentle . Nine year old ap·
half of ground localed bet· paloosa mare due to foal in
ween old Rt. 33 and new Rt . Augusr Neck retns and ts
33 facing the Meigs gentle . $600 00. Call 985·

SEVERAL choice building

992-5682

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

Harogator ;

Livestock

2571.

Hrs. : Mon. ~ Fri.
9 A.M.-5:30P.M.

PWMBING
AND
HEATING

~~==~~~~~~~t==~~~~~;;~~t======~6·~15~·~tf~c~

Int. tractor. 986. 304675'
2245
. .
63

-Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair

ttc

KAUFPS

ROGER HYSEU.'S
GARAGE
'

H&amp;R BODY SHOP

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

N.H. 367 Manure Spreder:
lA'

29

J·S 1mo

6~1--'F"are!m
,_,E~q.,u..,ir.Pm
=
e,_
nt,__

Disc.;
fert.
auger
; 113.5'
set
540,
4x16"
plows;
M.F.

Mobile

Rutland, 0~ .

Pomeroy

1973 House trailer, 12x60
1lfJ acre ground. $11,000.
742·2208 .

Hillcrest

R t. I Side Hill Rd.

We serv1ce wnu wa sel\1
Sm.:. II Eng1nn- 01.1r Spe&lt;io~lly
io~ Condor St .
PomeroY, Oh.
PH ttl-297S

1975 VIKING Mobile Home,
12x65 in excellent con·
d ition, underpinntng in·

Available

LEO MORRIS

YAZOO - Hi ·wheel mowen

992-2181

e. Matn St.

All Models

mers

PMC,

c'arpel. B ' x S Sales, Inc.,

home.

ll:S fun 10 walch your knrllrni
turn into a dall.
Knrl 1irl or boy doll or bolh ol
synlhelrc worsled rn. 5 lryely
colors. All one llat prece and so
easy IQ knil on 2 needles. Sew
' "ms ond stufl Patlern 7332
drrections. dolls aboul I 9" tall.
$2.00 lor each pallern . Add 501
each p.~ltern lor lrrst·class arr·
marl Jnd. handlrni. Stnd to:
Alice,..
."I 1
.......h Dept.
'I
Dally Sentinel
Ia 113, Old Chehta Su., Now
Tort, NT 10113. ~rint Narot,
Addla, lip, ~alttrn Number.
Catch Otllo lhe era II boom! Send
lor our ~EW 1981 NHOLECRAn
CATAlOG. O•er 172 desr1ns. 3
paHerns rnsrde. $1 00
CUfT 11110115. .$1.75 IICh

land~1ark

1-11 Horu Power R1dlng
Mower
1- Good Hotpotnt W.o!UIU
l- 2S" GE T\1
1- l S cu. ft . HOIIKJilll

ARD

Call742-3195
or 992-7680
2-B·tfc

Pomeroy

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Two

ll-511

Rates and Other Information

35 _ _ _ _ __

ow At

home, 3 bedrooms, equtp·
ped kitchen, garage,
basement, large lot Price

Mobile Homes
for Rent

~2 - CI .

New , used, and anflque fur ·
niture . No item to lerge or

Let George Miller check
your present electrical
system.
Residelltial
&amp; Commercial

riding mower. Phone 992 ·
2117 or 992·2528 after 5.

6S acre farm , 6 room house.
out buildings, barn,
pasture land, farm land,

367·1811

dealer. Call BOb Roberts
afler 5 p.m. 992·2592.

e MERCHANDISE

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

&amp; C! R1p1or
U - Witi!C! d To 00

. Headquarters

Real Eslate- Gener•i -

Old or historical Items
from Meigs Co. Par ·
ticularly Pomeroy. Signed
stone-ware, bOttles, ad ·
vertisi ng , photogr llphs ,
tokens,
documents ,
souvenir pieces, postcards,
etc. I' m e colledOf, not a

46- 5p•&lt;t lor fltn t
47- W•nttd lo If tnt
41- Equ l pm tnl lor lhnt

1980 Sears 10 h.p. 36 inch

three bedjooms, new car·

Wrlle : M.D. Miller. Rt . • ,
Pomeroy, OH 45769 . Or
call9'12·7760.

45- ICAooml '

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Housing

Housing
Headquarters ·

rings,
lewelry, Sliver
dollars, sterling, etc. Wood
ice boxes, jars, antiques,
etc . complete households .

41- Mobtlt Homn
lor Ill tnt
u - illpirlmtnl tor lftnl

9- Wunled to Huy

on largest

IRON AND BRASS BEDS ·
Old furniture. desks, gold

41- Houst\ l or Rtnt

·For all of your wiring needs.

1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65,

$27 ,500 .
THERE ' S NOTHING
LIKE HOME OWNER·
SHIP. WE 'CAN HELP
YOU GET IT . CALL
992·332S or 992-3876.

Pome,.oy 992 ·2689.

e RENTALS

7 rooms &amp; batn, full size at·
tic. 3 room basement. In
Pomeroy . 992 ·7001.

32

good repair older home
with carpet•ng, nat . gas
furnace , 3 bedrooms,
storm drs and windows,
garage and at I city
utilities . Out of flood.

· end . Sl2.50 per ton . Bundled
s lab
S 10 50 per lon .
' Delivered to Ohio Pallet
Co., Rock Springs Rd .,

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

l ..- Ann ou " c~m~n l s

Rei! I Estate- General

large yard . Only $31,000.
IDEAL FOR YOU - In

Store , Pomeroy, Ohio .t5769

U"

Homes tor Sale

water-sewer· Electric
Gas Line-Ditches
Water Line Hook-ups
Septic Tanks
CountY Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.
3 6 7 7 56 0

MILLER ELECTRIC
SERVICE

conditioned . 390 Ford
motor Call667·6372 aftj;!r 5.

negotiable. 992-7841.

~:::t:::::::::::::::::::.~ LOOKS NEW - and just

Wanted to Buy · class rings,

or Write Daily Sentinel Cla·s sified Dept.
111 Court 51., Pomero'f, 0., 45769

4- Gu•IW IY
) - HIIIppy Ad S
1- LOIIInd ICound
1 Y111rdSIIe
1- Pub!J( S.lt

by Memory Gardens. Ter·

216 E. Second Street

wedding bands, anything
stamped, 10K, 14K, or 18K
gold . Silver coins, pocket
watches. Call Joe Clark at
992-2054 at Clark's jewelry

PHONE 992-2156

eANNOUNCEMENTS

992·2571 or 1·687·6429.

Room,

for

Athens, OH 594-4221

WANT AD INFORMATION

32 = = = =
31.
33
34. _ _ _ _ _ __

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

HAVE

Treasure Chest Coin Shop,

diameter

1- C•r&lt;lo j Tfl•nk•
1- l nMtmor,,m

Beaufiful three bedroom
ranch brick home in Baum
Addition, Pomeroy , Ohio.
Gills heat, central air. Call

60o40 .

CHIP WOOD . Poles ma. .

29. _ _ _ _ _ __
30. _ _ _ _ __

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

12
Situations Wanted
TREE TRIMMING and
removal. 949· 2129 or 991·

5rlver. Call J. A. Wamsley ,

tWantAd

2817
. _

15. - - - ' - - - - - 16. _;.__ _ _ __

Wanted 10 Buy
WANTED TO BUY :
GOLD,
SILVER ,
PLATINUM, STERLING·
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR ·
Y, MISC . ITEMS. AB ·
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP , MIDDLEPORT ,
OHI09'12·3476.
OLD COINS, pocket wat
ches, class rings, wedding
9

Servic~.
Earo ld Dean LO(KSM I TH
Raymond Co fter tl l
Master Kevrng , Com ·
Donald Weaver bt nattons, Bonded Call :
Trustees, Scipio New Haven , w . va. 130~J
Township, Me1Q S 881·1079 .
County , O.h to

Name--------------

Homes for Sale

31

ms. 992·7741.

Will care tor the elderly in
our home. Women, men, or
couples. Trained and ex·

a.m.

Social Calendar

collect,

PubUc Sole
&amp; Auction
AUCTION · Large farm

Equipment Co., on u .s .
Hwv . 35, Henderson,
W VA ., call for details. 675·
Jol40 . Sal . March 21st 10

.,

Call

caro! Day. 518·489 8395 .

board,

eQuipment auction, Sat .•
March 2lst. at Siders

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classlfieds and
Savell I

necessary .

931 Hysell St., Middleport
Wed. &amp; Thurs., March 4 &amp;
s. Varieties of mer ·
chandise. 9'12·7453. 9·dork.
.8

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

31

REESE
TRENatiNG
SERVICE

fl~4~06~2j.5_jS~t~.~R~t~.~6~6~!ii~ITii~i~2~·1~3~·l~m~~o.~p~d~.~~~~P~h~.~~-~~~~~~

1973 26 foot Cruise air
motor home generator. Air

gOOd timber . Located on
peri e helpful. Guaran·
gOOd gravel road . $50,000.
teed toys and gifts. No cash ATTRACTIVE home on 949·2589 .
in-vestment, no collecting, two and one·half acres.
deliv•rl~g . car &amp; phone Private setting on St. Rt. 7
5 ye~r old ranch style

elderly people. Rutland·
Pomeroy·Middleport area .
742-2218.

Yard Sale

Dani els. 742·2951 or 99i·
2082.

---

Real Estate

Work In daytime helping

va1ua61e to neg lect, expert
tuning &amp; and r epair . Lane

Hostesses for the February
meeting of the Riverview Garden
Club where Mrs. Clennont Harris,
Mrs. Herman Grossnickle and Mrs.
Donald Putman at the Harris home.
Devotions which had been prepared
by Mrs. Putman were presented by
• Mrs. Harris. " A Song of Prayer" Passed 12 15·80
ATTE ST ·
was read by Mrs. Harris and a Jane
Walton , CJerk
moment of Silent prayer was held in
APPROVED
Clare nce Andrews
remembrance of Mrs. Ella Hannum.
Mayor
Roll call was answered by members
giving a personal trait of (3) 3, 10, 2tc
Washington or Lincoln. Notes of
thanks were read from the Athens
Mental Health Center, Mrs. Opal
Johnson and MISS Naomr Pickens.
Cards were signed for several friends.
The program topic was Forcing
Buit"' by Mrs. Denver Weber and
Mrs. Lyle Balderson. Bulbs which
force well include: Hyacinths,
Double Tulips, Daffodils, Crocuses,
Lilies, and Lily of the Valley. Bulbs
should be firm and solid and free of
Wri te your ow n ad and order by mai l w1th th is
~ oupon . Cancel your ad by phone "" 11en yo u ge t
bruises or mildew stains. Mrs.
results Money not refundabl e.
Weber explained the various ways of
growing bulbs and the process of
planting them. Mrs. Balderson
displayed some bulbs which had I
been forced. Leaflets were given to I Address __________..__
the members telling the various :
ways of gr~wing bulbs.
Phone _____________
1
An auclion was held wrth Mrs. 1
Frank Bise serving as auctioneer.
Pr 1nt one word in each
Games were conducted by Mrs. Rise
spa ce below . Each in
itia i or group of f1gures
and Mrs. Grossnickle with several
counts as a word Count
winning prizes. The door prize went
name and address or
to Mrs. Ernest Whitehead.
phone number if used
Delicious refreshments were serYou ' ll ge t bener resu lts
if
you descri be fully ,
ved to Mrs. Brse, Mrs. Walter
g1ve pr ic e. The Se nt inel
Brown, Mrs. Ronald Cowdery, Mrs.
reserves th e rtght t o
Roy Hannum, Mrs. Donald Myers,
classi fy . edit or re rec t
any ad. Your ad will be
Mrs. Ronald Osborne, Mrs . Richard
put 1n the proper
Roberts, Mrs. Weber, Mrs. Baldercfa S1 f1 Cdt10n If you' ll
son, Mrs. Gene Young, and Mrs.
checK the proper boxt
These cash rates
below
in cl ude d1scount
Whitehead by the hostesses. Each
guest received a needlepoint book
marker.
(
Wanted
•r
17 _ _ _ _ _ __
For Sa le
The next meeting will he at the
Announce
ment
18 _ _ _ _ _ __
home of Mrs. Roberts.
I
For Rent
19. _ _ _ _ _ __
20. _ __:__ __

1-----------r-----------1

3830.

SHOOT,

Racine Gun Club, every
Frtday night starting at
7:30 p.m . Factory cho~e
guns only .

Riverview
hear of bulb forcing

TUESDAY
"
,SPECIAL MEETING Middleport
Lodge 363 F&amp;AM Tuesday at 7 p.m.
Work in fellow craft degree. AU
members asked to attend.
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 Gardener,s, Wednesday, 6:30p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Fennan Moore.
Covered dish dinner. Mrs . Alice
Thompson to be the guest demonstrator.
SOUP DINNER , Racine
Methodist Church, United Methodist'
Women to sponsor. Serving to begin
at 4 p.m. in church annex.

GUN

collar,
name Pepper .
Please call I love.hlm, 667·

PH. 992•7119

Good used electr~c sewmg
machine. 742·2823
bed, two chairs, like new
Living room
suite,
carpet
andhrde·a·
pad.
Drapes,

Lost :Tan &amp; While collie.
Lost in Rocksprings area.

LOST in Tuppers Plains.
Black male poodle. Blue

$30. load delivered. 992
5240.

Average $10.00 per hour
plus free wardrobe for
thosl! who qualify .

FRIENDLY HOME Toy

•Siding •Insulation •Roofing •Storm Windows • Concrete Work • Septic: Systems
•Backhoe •Dump Truck- •Remodeling
•New construction •Guttering &amp;
Downspouts

Misc. Merchanise

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

Attractive part time work
for
well
groomed
homemakers who love
pretty fashions and want to
keep UP on current styles.

Parties now In our ::16th
year,Js eKpendlng and has
open!s for managers &amp;
deal
. Party Plan ex·

CONSTRUCTION

767·3167 or 557·3411.
54

sJeJI

DAVID BRICKLE$

Noth ing too large . Also,

guns, pocket watches and
com co llections. Call 6U ·

SliS.Oo.to S500 weekly doing
mai111]0 work . No ex·
perle'l'i:e required . AP·
PLY:. C!rcle Sales, P.O.
Box 224·D, Richmond Hill,
NY lU18.

,.esume' to Box 179H, c·o
The Dally Sentinel, 111
court Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.

Phone Rollin Radford 992·
3'112.

l PAY ' highest pri ces
possible for gold and silver
coi ns, rings , lewelry, et ~.
Contact Ed Burkett Barb~r
Shop, Middleport .

pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec ·
tibles or entire estates .

LADY-or girl to live in. 9'12·

and four white ' feet. Short
hair that Is part boxer and
.part Labrador . Answers to
the name ot Libby . Has

1981 dog tag no. 00872 . Call
after 5 to 742·3014.

Announcements

AT-TENTION :
( IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will

2686• •

please phone 992-3941 or
Las land Found
669·4$15.
Lost last Friday a female
black dog wl!h white front Car .s alesman . Send

Business Services

----~-53
Antiques

18·2,.

6

MUto
meet with
students here ·

Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE'"

· the staff. Pleue call 992· some great gifts as a sen·
tine I route carrier. Phone
2890 for appointment .
riOhl away and get on
, - - ' - - - - - - us
the eligibility liS! at 9'12·
TICKETS to Memorlol Golf 2156 or 992·2157.

VIRGO (A.uc. ~pl ZIJ You should be
luckier in situations which can add to your
reaourcea or enhance yoor reputation. You'U
get somelhin&amp;I!Oillij: In these areu.
UBRA (Sept. %3-0l'l Dl It should prove
more advantageous today to focus oo your
grander !iehemea rather than on your more
mund.ane Idea.. " Big'' is luckyfetryou.
SCORPIO IOct. !4-Nov. !!) Lady Luck teflds to favor you today rather Indirectly. In
fact, something hil!lhlY Bdvantageou could
be devt'!IOplng which ,might be l'4lmpletely
screened(rom your v:lew.
SAGITI'ARIVS INol'. %3-Det. 211 Commitments or agreement, which you make
tOdav !lhould tum out beneficial f()(' all concem'ed, especially If you're deallng with per·
30ns of your caliber.
CAPRICORN {0«. t!-J1o. ltl "career
opportunity could develop for you today
because of the. clever way you 11re able to
1\alldle an old, unresolved problem The ng ht
eyes will be w11tching.
AQUARIUS ( Jill. !0-Feb. li)Be btlth alert
und a good listener today. Someone "hom
know aocia lly may come to you with an
mteresting prqK~SBI whel'1"by you LWid use
yOUr knOW·hOw profitably

PlSC£8 (Feb. !t-Ma~h M) Although they

Announc:ements

THE DABBLE SHOP
NOW OPEN
Mon. ·Wed. 10:00·9:00
Tues.-Fn.-Sat.

10:00-5:00
Closed Thursdays
Stop in and see our line
of plasterCraft . You can
enioY rnakinq your qitt5
and help fight 1nflafion
Located neKt to Dale
H1ll Ford Tractor in
Pomeroy.
2·23· 1 mo.

BS

General Hauling

J&amp;C Sanitation Service .
Trash Pickup available in
V illage of Middleport.

WELLS

Phone 992-5016 or 992-7597

anytime.

83

Excavating

COMPLETE sever in ·
stallation &amp; backhoe ser·
vice for Racine ·Syracuse
sewer' distri ct . Dozer work

if needed. 949·2293.

LVSEENA
@ETSALL
6&lt;/S:SI£!::&gt;

tiP 70
f'tiBLICIZE

APET
I'Jfi.f)JECT· ··

Dozer wnrk. Small jobs a

-nloiiX ,.

specralty. 742 ·1753 .

HEI..SN (?flOW,

- - - -Electrical
--·---

Q41(

SWE·S I~._.

84

---~~ Ref!igeratl~ __

SEWING
Repairs ,

makes!

MACHINE
service ,

992·2284

all

The

-- - --- -·-·-·tlng. Free est Imales. CALL
46 ~ S_pace f~r R_en_t
992-6190 or 949·2614.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park , Roule 33, North ol French City Painting.
Pomeroy . LarQe lots . Call Residential , commercial.
9~2-7479 '
inter1or ,
exterior .

Fabric snop , Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales
~nd Servi ce. W e sharpen
Sc1ssors.

Spcci (llltling 1n Interior
TRAILER spaces tor rent. pain I ing, paper hanging &amp;
~outhcrn
Valley Mobile te xtur ed ceil ings. Free
Home Park, ClleShirP. Oil estllllt~'r r; 367·7784 or 367
1/q'l Jq54
7160

toaster :;, irons, all small
appil.1nccs. Lawn mower.

ELWOOD
REPAIR

BOWERS
Sweepers.

Nex t to State Hrghway

Gar.1gr on Route 7, 985

3R1.' ·

51'.,
14,1.P!801Z,

WASI-l ·

�•
Tuesday, March 10,1981

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Area dea.t hs
Neva Vivian Johnson
Mrs. Neva Vivian Johnson, 69,
Fort Myers, Fla., fonnerly &lt;1
Hebron, died Saturday following an
extended illnel!S.
Mrs. Johnson was born in Meigs
County, a daughter of the late
Marion and Lorena Keyes Sloter.
Surviving are ber husband, Clason
Johnson ; a son, Hobert Wells, both
of Fort Myers, and a sister, Mrs.
Erruna Connolly, Reedsville.
FUIIeral services will be held at 1
p.m.Thursday at the Long Bottom
United Methodist Church with the
Rev. Edsel Hart officiating. Burial
will be in Sand Hill Cemetery. Friends may call at the White Funeral
Home in Coolville from 2 to~ and 7 to
9 p.m. Wednesday. The body will lie
in state one hour at the church one
hour prior to services.

Newton C. Lowe

-·

RATHER TAKES OVER- Dan Rather takes over position after Waller Cronkite rellnd as ancbor of tbe
as tbe anchorman of tbe CBS Evening News In New top-ralednationalnewsprogram.tAPLaserpbolo}.
York Mouday. Rather took over the anchorman

President's budget spares
defense, but little else
.

WASHINGTON (AP) _President
Reagan declaring "the next steps
are up t~ congress.'" today proposed
$48.6 billion in spending cuts for 1982
across the breadth of government
sparing defense and little else fro~
the chopping block
The $695.3 billio~ budget for 1982
would leave a deficit of $45 billion. It

urges newly aMounced spending
reductions in more than 200 areas,
including veterans and job
progr~ms, water projects and mortgage msurance.
" The plan I outlined will stop
runaway inflation and revitalize our
economy if given a chance," Reagan
said in a statement that outlined cuts

m more nearly 300 programs from

food stamps to space e~Ioratt~n.
In a revamped verst~ ·of his_l982
spending plans, the prestdent satd ~e
ts prepared . to recommend sllll
deeper spending cuts if necessary to
keep federal spending from .nsmg
faster. In relaying . his plan to
Congress, Reagan pomtedly remm·

Meigs County happenings.
Emergency nms

FIRST CHARGE
Linda Freeman, Union Avenue,
Pomeroy, appeared before Meigs
County Juvenile Judge Robert E.
Buck, on charges filed by Meigs
County Attendance Officer, Otis
Knopp, that Mrs. Freeman failed to
cause her 11&gt;-year old child to attend
school regularly.
Mrs. Freeman wa~ fined $20 and
costs and was required to post a $100
cash bond on first offeitse. Penalty
for a second offense requires a jail
sentence of not less than 10 days nor
more than 30 days.

•

WILL DISCUSS PROM
A meeting of parents of Meigs
High School juniors or seniors will
be held at 7 this evening in the
lil~rary
the highactivities
school to discuss
prom ofnight
with
Mrs.Dorothy J. Oliver, junior ad·
visor. Any parents who are in·
terested by cannot attend tonight's
meeting are to leave a message for
Mrs. Oliver at the high school or call
her at 992-2570 after school hours.

Newton C. Lowe, former Meigs
County resident, died Friday at Ann
Arbor, Mich.
He was preceded in death by his
parents, Newton and Minnie Lowe;
two sisters, Hazel Mankin and Donna Quickel, and two brothers,
Donald Lowe and Arnold Lowe.
Surviving are his wife, Dorothy; a
ded lawmakers and special interest
groups that he felt he was acting on a
"mandate for change" delivered by
the voters lastfall.
" There is nothing more important
than putting America's economic
house in order. The next steps are up
to Congress," he said.
Reagan submitted his revised 1982
budget in tandem with the details on
his proposal for a three-year cut in
personal income tax rates of 10 per·
cent a ye~r. Top Republicans on
Congress' tax-writing conunittees
were to introduce the ad·
ministration's tax plan later today.
Reagan's budget makes deep cuts
in the spending blueprint President
Carter recommended before leaving
office.
The more tha n 200 new Iy disc Ios ed
program cuts included :
- a $700 million reduction in

sister, Kitty Lowe, Middleport, and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held Wednesday at the Logan Funeral Home
in Ypsilanti, Mich.

Floyd Mescher
Floyd (Dutch) E. Mescher, 58,
3015 Lebanon Road, Lebanon, Ohio,
fonnerly of Minersville, died Sunday at Christ Hospital in Cincinnati.
He was a son of the late Harry and
Minnie Grueser Mescher and was
also preceded in death by a sister,
Anna Kathryn Harrah and a
brother, Fred.
Surviving are his wife, Joan Hal'brecht Mescher and five sons, Den·
·nis, Harry, Chris and Paul, all of
Lebanon, and Keith of Waynesville;
two grandsons and several .nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be held at I
p.m. Thursday at the Sacred Heart
Church in Pomeroy with the Rev.
Paul Welton officiating. Burial will
be in Sacred Heart Cemetery.
Rosary services will be conducted at
8 p.m. Wednesday at the Ewing
Funeral Home and friends may call
at the funeral home fro:m 7 to 9
Wednesday. In lieu of Dowers
ds may contribute to the Cancer
Society.

ELBERFELD$
Boys. Authentic
PAINTER PANTS

WASIDNGTON (AP) - Congress
is making no promises about what
President Reagan's proposals for
$48.6 bUlion In spending ~uts will
look like after it finishes testing the
political winds, but· congressional
leaders vow to complete work on
some kind of economic package this

swnmer.
"He won the election; he is entitled to the chance to see if his
program works," said Sen. Alan
Cranston, assistant Democratic
leader in the Senate.
But the Californian added :
" Congress will disagree in specifics
where we think )lllOple are being
hurt. Congress doesn't give a blank
check to any president."
The administration's plan would
save $409 billion in the next five
years, about three-quarters of the
reductions need~ to meet Reagan's
goal of balancing the budget in 1984.
The package sent to Capitol Hill
Tuesday contains reductions in 300
domestic programs from th~ projections left by fanner Presidl!'nt Carter
and shoots for total spending of
$695.3 billion in fiscall982.
"The thundering herd of sacred
cows has now been reduced to a han·

forcing deferral or cancellation d
hospital construction;
- Cuts in the Comprehensive Em·
ployment and Training Administration (CETA) in addition to
the previously announced Intention
to abolish the $3.6 billion public service jobs program that employs
310,000 people.
-Sharp reductions in Federal
Housing Administration and Gover·
nment National Mortgage
Association mortgage insurance and
loan guarantee conuniiments.
-Cutbacks·of scheduled increases
in railroad retirement benefits.
-Reduction of about $180 million
in the Corps rl Engineers water
project program, a politically
popular item in Congress.
- Reduced federal subst'dies for
merchant shipbuilding and a cuthack in credit assistance forsmall

Voi.19,No. 118
Copyrighted 1981

ToDAY .
••• IN THE.W
Heroic acts hospitalize man
·DETROIT - A ~year-old man was hospitalized today with a
possible heart attack after catching two children and using his body to
break the fall of two adults who jumped from the second-story windows of their burning house, officials said.
Three other children died in the Tuesday blaze. They were identified
as William Arnold, 11, and his two sisters- 1iicia, 10, and Glenise, 5.
Five other people escaped with minor injuries.

LEASIN(i
,..EQUIPMENT .

ELBERfELDS
IN POMEROY

Another killer may die in chair
CROWN POINT, Ind. :.... Convicted murderer James Brewer has
been condemned to die at the Indiana State Prison on April9, one month to the day after Steven 'T. Judy's electrocution there. But Brewer,
unlike Judy, is fighting the death penalty in court.
Lake Superior Court Judge James Clement announced the date
Tuesday, five days after the Indiana Supreme Couri upheld the 24year-old Brewer's murder conviction and death penalty.
Brewer was convicted in 1978 of killh\g Steven Skirpan, 29, of Gary,
during a robbery in December 1977.

-------================---1~~~~~~~~~~~~

Will recall5,000 worket{,

WEEKEND AT MEIGS INN

LORDSTOWN, Ohio - General Motors said it expects to complete
call back of some 5,000 laid-off production workers in Lordstown this
week and will have its new J-car model rolling off the assembly line
soon after that.
Several body panels that will be used on the new front-wheel-drive
suMompacts have moved as far as the painting booth, said plant
spokesman Jack Roberts . He said the plant will be "full of vehicles"
by ncKI week, with the first new cars to roll out by late in the week.

oz.

$725

Stop prostitution ring

Entertainment

AKRON, Ohio - Akron police have charged a man and a woman
with running a teenage prostitution ring that specialized in working
truck stops.
,
Police said the two operated a ring of six call girls, ages 13 to 19.
Four of the girls are being held at the Akron Juvenile Detention Center
but have not been charged. Police are seeking two other girls.
A 13-year-old runaway from the Ohio Youth Commission was picked
up last Wednesday and tipped police to the ring .

Friday &amp;Saturday

Census figures
show increase
in population

~~\\

GOOD/'iEAII
..

ALL LEGAL
BEVERAGES
SERVED

'"'c
Gfl,., ,.'11(1/Ill
a

CJI.~tto'~ c.,.,
If( 011,

THE M.EIGS INN

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

Labor availability reason

..

NEW BOSTON , Ohio - The availability of skilled labor in Scioto
County is one reason why a steel processing company has decided to
open a plant here.
The Custom Steel Process Corp., based In Columbus, said Monday
that itwill occupy a building vacated by Empire-Detroit Steel Co.,
which closed last summer. The company plans to use about half ri. a
102 000-squar.,.foot building, which it is leasing for production pur·
pos'es, and employ between 20 and 25 people . .A thre.,.year expansion,
for utilizing the entire structure, may eventually ~eqUJre as many as
125 workers.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The winning nuniber selected Tuesday night In the
Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Number" is 285 •
The lottery reported earnings of $559,935 from the wagering on the
drawing. Lottery officials said sales prior to the drawing totaled
$932,616.50, and holders of winning tickets are entitled to share
$372,681 .50.

Weather
Partial clearing tonight. Lows 25-30. Mostly sunny Thul'fday. Highs
in the low to inid-50s. Chance of precipitation 20 percent tonight and 10
percent Thursday. Winds southwesterly 1~15 mph tonight.
.
Exteaded Oblo ForecaatFriday through Sunday:
A chance of showers south and showers or snow flurries north on
Saturday. Otherwise mostly cloudy. Higha in mld-40s to mid-50s. Lows
in the 30s .

' Interest
6 ·0 %L-~S-o-cl-al

pared with 13 percent this year .
Senate Majority Leader Howard
Baker Jr. of Tennessee has exhorted
his fellow Republicans to postpone
until next year any legislative
proposals not connected to the tax
and spending efforts. He asked them
to make ·1981 "Ronald Reagan's
session Qf Congress."
However, Rep. James R. Jones,[).
Okla., chairman rl the House
Budget Conunittee, said his panel
will "review and improve on this
budget."
That process is certain to involve
hearing cries rl anguish from
organiZed labor, civil rights groups
and other organizations that oppose
the social cuts and already have
mobilized coalitions to combat the
proposals.
Cranston . said congressional approval of 75 percent of the spending
cuts "wol!ld be a victory for
Reagan."
"Congress doesn't respond to
problems, Congress responds to
pressure," said Rep. Edwin R.
Bethune Jr., R·Ark.
With Republicans in control of the
Senate, the main battleground for
(Continued on page 14)

•

e

._BANK ONE ." -

. . .TO BUSINESS, INDUSTRY,
. . .AND THE PROFESSIONS

dful," said White House budget
director David A. Stockman.
But House Speaker Thomas P.
O'Neill Jr., D-Mass., said the
package left too many questions
unanswered and Jredicted the
current surge of •pro-Reagan sen·
timent will abate "when people truly
appreciate" what the cuts will mean
to the nation.
"The.n," O'Neill said, "the wind
will blow."
Reagan's proposals would reverse
a two-decades-old trend of giving
social programs more and more of
the federal dollar while reducing the
percentage going to the military.
The revised fiscal 1982 program,
which would boost defense spending
by more than $4 billiorf, leaves a
projected $45 billion deficit, partly
stemming from the administration's
separate proposals to cut tax rates.
Spending next year would be about
$40 billion higher than this year's
projected spending.
Despite the sharp program cuts
for fiscal 1982, which begins Oct. I,
Reagan would only slow - not stop
- the rise in federal spending. Un·
der his plan,' spending would in·
CrOfSO 6 percent next year, com·

-·

Several calls were answered by
local emergency units over the
weekend, the Meigs Emergency
r~~~~~~~-~
-· ~t~t~
· ~~~d~·
~-~bu.s~in~ess~e:s:...-------~
ms
ra ton
spen mg,
Medical Services reports.
On Saturday at~:Oii p.m., the Middleport Unit took Bernice Grueser,
Middleport, to Veterans Memorial
Reg . &amp; Slim Sizes 8 to 16
Hospital and at 9:10 p.m. went to Lin·
Student Sizes 26 to 30
coin St. to treat Gary Hart on the
100%
cotton drill in
scene. The Pomeroy Unit at 12:43
natural or pre-washed
p.m. Saturday took Norma Goodwin,
WALTON EMCEE
Brick St., to Veterans Memorial
blue denim.
Kermit Walton, manager of the
Hospital.
On Sunday at 7:42 a.m., the
TO END MARRIAGES
New York Clothing House, was
Pomeroy Unit took Edson Hart from
James Lee Ratcliff, Reedsville, master of ceremonies for a style
County Road 20 to Veterans and George Joseph Ratcliff, Reed· show staged Sunday afternoon at the
BANK ONE OF POMEROY. NA
Memorial Hospital. The Middleport sville, filed for dissolution of Meigs Inn in conjunction with a
6141992•2133
Unit at 11: 16 p.m. took Shi~ley marriage in Meigs County Common cheese and wine tasting party
Caruthers from Jessie Creek Road Pleas Court.
Unit offor the benefit
American
to Pleasant Valley Hospital and the
of theCancer
Meigs !-I
Granted divorces were Judith Kay staged
Pomeroy Unit at ll:50 p.m. took . 'Hunter from Roy Roger Hunter; Society.
Belinda Ross, S. Third Ave.,. to Rose M. Deem from Charles H.
Veterans Memorial.
FREE CLOTHING DAY
Deem, and Penni Clark from Mark
The
Gallia-Meigs Community AcAllan Clark.
tion
Agency
will hold its Free
Five emergency runs were made
MEN'S
FJ;llOWSHIP
Clothing
Day
for i't.l·lOcome pel'by local units Monday, the Meigs
TO
MEET
sons
on
Wednesday,
March 11, from
Emergency Medical Services reporThe
Meigs
Men's
Fellowship
of
the
9
a.m.
until
12
noon.
The agency's
ts.
Churches
of
Christ
of
Meigs
County
is
now
located
in the
clothing
bank
At 3:30 p.m., the Pomeroy Unit
will
meet
at
the
Pomeroy
Church
on
old
high
school
building
in
Cheshire.
took Martha Miller from Pomeroy
Health Care Center to Veterans March 16. There will be a chili supper prepared by the Pomeroy men
FREECWfHINGDAY
~. Memorial Hospital. The Racine Unit
- - - - - - F R I D A Y SPECIAL---...,..,...·,t&lt;.
at
6
p.m.
Special
music
and
The
Gallia·Meigs Community Acat 7:37 p.m. treated Ray Deem at
tion
Agency
will
hold
its
free
devotions
will
follow
the
supper.
Ali
home in Portland.
Salad Bar, 6 Kansas City Steak,
clothing day for low income persons
The Middleport Unit at 9:58 ·a.m. men of Meigs County are invited to
Wednesday from 9 a.m. to 12 noon.
took John Stivers from North Third attend.
Vegetable, Potato, Soft Drink,
The
agency's clothing bank is now
ENTER HOSPITAL
Ave., to Holzer Medical Center and
located in the old high school
John and Jay Holsinger, six-year·
at 5:15 p.m., the Middleport Unit
Plus Tax
building
in Cheshire.
took James Wolfe, Ash St., to old twin sons of Grace and · Junior
Veterans Memorial Hospital. The Holsinger, Route I, Reedsville, will
WILLHAVESURGERY
Middleport Unit at 9:23 p.m. took enter Children's Hospital in Colum·
Tommy Lowery, Harrisonville,
Gary Hart from his home to bus Wednesday for observation. Jay who underwent surgery recently as
is scheduled to undergo heart .
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
the result of a hack injury, is a
surgery later this year. This con· patient at St. Anthony Hospital, 1450
finement to the hospital is expected Hawthorne Ave., fifth floor, Columto be for three or four days. The
twins attend Riverview Elementary bus.
School.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
LODGE WORK
Admitted-Renee Stone, Mid·
Shade River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM will dleport; James Wolfe, Middleport,
meet Thursday, March 12, at 7:30· and Mabel Miller, Pomeroy.
Meigs County's population is up p.m. at the lodge in Chester. Work
Discharged-Chester Foutly, Kimahnost 4,000 over the 1970 count, ac- will be in master mason degree.
berly Riffle, John Ash.
cording to preliminary reports on
the 1980 census issued Monday.
~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
The county is up oyer 1,800 I
households, as compared to 1970.
According to the preliminary
report Meigs County had 23,641
residents in 19110 compared to 19,799
In 1970. In the 1980 census, 9,290
housing units were recorded emPOWER STREAK 78
pared to7,329 in 1970.
Plus S2 SO
lQ
Rutland Village, according to the
Wl1 i t ew&lt;'! l l l ,
Plus
S1..50
report, lost residents In the 19110
F ET a nd
COWJt with 633 persons recorded In
O ld Tir ~
,.,
·1980and8831n 1970.
l"lliCE fET•••
· Other villages of the county gained
.with the 1980 count listed first in the
1.6A
.foUowing: Middleport, 2,967, 2, 784;
I I
Pomeroy, 2,718, 2,672; Racine, 913,
4 . ) . J.l ..
·6&amp;1, andSyracuse,IM4, 684.
tH~ •&lt;t
~~.
~. D
5
..,,,
Following are the 1980 census
.filurel for the townshipa of Meigs
Pomeroy, Oh.
Phone 992-3629
with the 1970 count listed second:
BLACIC.WAi..LB A"AILAIILI!
Bedford, 988, 750; Letart, 800, 854;
AT EVEN LOWER PfUCES
Olive, 1,669, 1,406; Orange,~. 707;
You must be 21 or accompanied
Uberal Budget Terms ... Low Monthly Poy,..,.nts
Rutland Township, 2,451, 1,874;
by parent or legal guardtan • .
Salem, 1,009, 8118; Saltsbury, 8,1130,
7,3113; Scipio, 1,014, 641; Sutton,
3,1l!O, 2,585; Cheater 2,085, 1,573;
Pomeroy
John F. Fultz, Mgr.
Columbia, 752, 619; Lebanon, 829,
992·2101
782."

Budget Shares

Congress tests
j)olitical winds

IJONS TO MEET
The Pomeroy-Middleport Lions
Club will meet at noon Wednesday at
the Meigs Inn.

at

National
Defense
47.8%

Safety Net
25.0%

28.7%

National
Defense
24.7%

1962

Social
Safety Net
36.8%

Interest
8.8%

National
Defen•e
33.2%

Social Safety
Net
40.1%

1981

1984

Source: Office of Monogernent ond Budget
A SHin' IN PRIORITIES - Charts based on allocate spending In 1984. Reagan's speodlng pla.ll
figures supplied by tbe Office of Management and shows a slarlling shUt In social programs to a defens1
Budget show how the national aliocatecllts spendlJJg In system beefed up by new weapons development. (AP
1981,1981, and bow tbe Reagan Administration plans to Laserpboto).

en tine
2 Sections, 14 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 11,1981

1S Cents

A Mul1imedia Inc. News a er

Panel okays ODOT budget
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
budget for the Ohio Department of
Transportation, described ' as
austere, is awliiting a House Door
vote that could pave the way for the
. Senate's addition of a gaspline tax

increa$e.
The $679 million spending plan for
the transportation and highway
safety departments during the fiscal
year starting July I cleared the

House Finance Conunittee on a IS-3 extra revenue is awarded , he said.
Rep. Frederick H. Deenng, [).
vote Tuesday.
But some members said the panel Monroeville, called his bill austere.
"It's a bar.,. bones budget," he
shirked its duties by tossing the tax
said. ' 'Strictly no new revenues.' '
hike question to the Senate.
ODOT officials said the bill con"I think we are· letting our fellow
House members down," said Rep.i tained only enough money to fund
Thomas P. Gilmartin, D· one new construction project, a fiv.,.
Youngstown. Leaving the tax hike mile section of the Appslachian
issue to the lienal!! could prevent Highway in Brown County. Funding
representatives from deciding how for the work was included at the in·

sistence of House Speaker Vernal G.
Riffe Jr., [).New Boston. The
Marietta-to-Cincinnati highway, under construction since the mid-1960s,
runs through part of his district.
Action by the House would send
the bill to the Senate for possible inclusion of a gasoline tax hike to
provide extra revenue which OOOT
officials call vital for maintaining'
Ohio's road network.

General Telephone plans expansion projects
ATHENS--Capital expansion
projects totaling $4.3 million are
planned for Its Athens district,
General Telephone Co. of Ohio announced today.
Existing call-transmitting and
distribution facilities will be increasedthroughoutthel3exchanges
of the district, said Jim L. Parker,
customer service manager.
Major additions of call-switching
equipment, providing a total of 2100
more customer lines, are scheduled
this year in Albany, Letart Falls,
Logan, Pomeroy and Rutland.
The largest addition of switching
equipment is scheduled at Logan
where 1,000 more customer lines and
400 new telephone number terminals
are to be Installed at a cost of
$192,1m.
"General will spend another
$1,767,229 to improve aOd expand
outside cable distribution in this
area", Parker said. "Crews will be
working in all parts of the district."
There are 72 projects scheduled.

No action taken
on road transfer
Robert Wingett, representating
Syracuse Village, met with the
Meigs County Board rl com·
missioners Tuesday regarding the
transfer of Sutton Township road 123
to a county owned road.
Phil Roberts, county engineer,
said he had not made a decision on
the issue. Wingett reported he was
under the impression that the road
would be accepted.
Roberts said he would have an answer by next Tuesday.
1"1"\.
Roberts also discussed h~wa)t)
operations with the board and repol'ted he is preparing the 1981 road
program.
Roberts indicated that he plans to
get a lot of brush cutting down along
county roads throughout the year
and hoped to have the gradall out
next week to begin ditching.
· Bob Bailey, EMS coordinator,
reported the EMS Board of Trustees
had recommended the hiring of Kay
Davis by the county since her CETA
position at the EMS office had ex·
pired. Commissioners had no objection since It had met the approval
of the trustees.
,
Christ Layh, admistrator for
Meigs Community School, requested
that certain MR accounts be reappropriated within the revenue
sharing appropriations at no ad·
illtonal cost. The board&gt;approved the
request.

General has met the goal of offering fiv.,.party service or less by
the end of 19110 as mandated by the
Public U,tilities Conunission of Ohio.
It also met its own goal of four-party
or less in most service areas.
The company is now working
towards a goal of offering one or two
party service to all customers. Year
progress is expected and the goal
should be reached toward the end of

the 1980's.
Last year General opened a new
reporting center for Logan repair,
· installation and construction crews.
Bordered by Elm St. on the east and
Eulalia Ave. on the west, it also ser·
ves as a vehicle parking and fueling
facility.
A regional garage for main·
tenance and repair of company
vehicles has been completed at

Athens and will be placed in service
soon. It is located at the compsny's
reporting center west of Athens on
Ohio58.
.
In addition to Athens, exhanges in
the district are Albany, Amesville,
Bremen, Guysville, Letart Falls,
Logan, New Marshfield, Pomeroy,
Racine, Rutland, Portland, Shade
and The Pltins. The district serves
more than 311,000 telephones.

Guilty plea leads to prison .. term

Ronald Coats, 22, Pomeroy,
pleaded guilty to several breaking
and entering charges that occurred
in Pomeroy during an appearance
before before Common Pleas Judge
John C. Bacon Tuesday.
Coats was sentenced to a tenn of
six months to five years and has
been taken to the Ohio Medical and
Reception Center in Columbus, the
Meigs County Sheriff's Department
reported.
Among the breaking and enterings

were The Century Bar, The Liberty
Bar, Gloeckner's Bar and two
homes.
The sheriff's department also
reported the theft of tools from the
Homer Cole Fann in Tuppers
Plains. Items taken were a cutting
torch, gauges, hose and several
wrenches.
Deputies also reported the arrest
of Jinunie Snider, 18, Pomeroy and
Randy Snider, 25 of Marietta in con-

FINAL REHEARSALS- Members of the Eastern
H(&amp;h School Baud are shown lo final rehearsals for a
wtutereoncert to be given at 7:38p.m. Tbunday lo the.
hlglt school auditorium. Dlrecllne Ill lnitrnmental
supervisor, jam.. Wllbelm. JoiDiq tbe Eastern IUgb
band In the concert Tbunday olgltt will be Trlmble
!Ugh School Baad, Glouater, directed by John Gregory.

nection with' the theft of tools from
the Landmark Service Station. The
tools, owned by Douglas Bell, have
been recovered .
The pair appeared before Meigs
County Court Judge Patrick O'Brien
on petty theft charges where they
pleadecl guilty. They were sentenced
to 30 days in jail. However, the sentences were suspended and they
were placed on six months probation
and ordered to pay costs.

Tbe bauds wm present Individual selecUona, m011ly
lrom Saturdlly's upcomiu&amp; district baud compeUUoo In
Galllpollll, aud the lwo bands will combine for 1everal
ownbers. Tbe oealor band of Eastern.will compete In
GalllpoUa at 11:30 a.m. Saturday, Clau C, and tbe
Eaatem JUDior Baud will compete at 3 p.m. 'l'llundlty
eveolng' a coacert Ill free of charge.

,,

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