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Pase-14-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Hijackers won't extend deadline

State leader says commissioners

DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) - .
Hijackers threatenlld to kl11 three
American hostages they identified
as CIA agents and refu.sed to elrtend
today's deadline for blowing up a
Paki.ltanl jetliner, themselves and
~ 100 others.
"Be prepared to collect their
bodies," the hijackers said in a letter dictated to Pakistani authorities
from the plane at Damascus airport.
Tbe letter was released by the of.
flclal Syrian news agency, SANA.
The letter said the Americans
were "CIA 11gents," that they would
be shot lf the three hijackers'
demands were not met, and that the
air pirates would not extend the 11
a.m. EST deadline for Pakistan to
free ICOI"es of prisoners.

can live with Reagan's reductions
WASHINGTON (AP ) - Commissioners of Ohio counties can live
with President Reagan's proposed
budget cuts, says Harriet Fenner
Stivers, president of the officials'
state association.
But Mrs. Stivers, a Highland
County corrunissioner, said Tuesday
. the officials are worried that there
will be cutbacks in ·the mandated
programs if there are funding cuts.
"They (federal government of.
ficials) mandate so many things,
most counties can't cope with them.
They don't have the money," said
Mrs. Slivers, in Washington with a
group of 50-local officials from Ohio
attending meetings of the National
Association of Counties.
Roger Tackett, a Clark County
commissioner, was concerned about
possible cutbacks of some federal
programs. Welfare and industrial
revenue bonds, for instance, are
"vitally important to local communities,'' he said.
"Industrial revenue bonds have

programs of special benefit to Ohio.
Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio,
.criticizlld the president's "meat ax"
approach to cutting programs,
saying he would oppose some cuts.
He called cutbacks in synfuels
research to provide a!!emate fuel
sources "penny-wise this year, but
pound-foolish down the road." ·
Rep. Delbert Latta, R-Qhio,
ranking Republican on the House
Budget Conunittee, said he would
"do my best to cut$45 (billibn) to $50
billion out of the budget this year."
"We've been living' beyond our
means," he said. "It's time to shape

provided a large number of jobs," he
said. The bonds are used by counties
to raise funds to encourage industrial development or expansion.
Some Ohio congressmen who addressed the group were less supportive of Reagan's economic
program, however, than the commi5.5ioners.
lien. Howard M. Metzenbaum, DOhio, called Reagan's budgetbalancing goal "on target." . But
some parts of the plan discriminate
against the Northeast and Midwest,
"particularly against Ohio," ·he
said.
The $600 million Economic
Development
Administration
program, benefiting the nation's
older industrial centers, was being
eliminated completely, while $4
billion in water projects for Western
states were being cut back only 10
percent, Metzenbaum said.
Metzenbaum plans to fight cutbacks in EDA and the Appalachian
Regional Conunission and other

up."

Despite program cutbacks, shifting of funds into block grants to
local communities would ·mean that
"in the long run, you are going to
have more money than before," Latta said.

Gas line rupture cause uncertain

CHICKEN BARBECUE
A chicken barbecue will be held
Sunday, March· 15, at Racine Fire
Station beginning at II a.m.
MEETS FRIDAY
There will be a meeting of the Title
I Parent Advisory Council at I :30
p.m. Friday at the Rutland Elementary School. All interested individuals are invited to attend and
view a selection of reading series
books which are being considered
for adoption by the Meigs County
Board of Education.
vETERANS MEMORIAL
·Admitted-Orville Hill, Reed-

sviUe; Terry Brewer, Long Bottom;
Christina Haning, MiddlepPrt; Sara
Randolph, Pomeroy ; Charles
Williams, Letart, W. Va.; Carol
Wines, Middleport; Teresa Dorst,
Shade; Dana Welch, Albany ; Bertha
Spencer, Pomeroy.
Discharged-none.
55 FIRE CALLS
The Middleport Fire Department
answered a total of 55 calls during
the month of February including 43
emergency medical calls and 12 fire
and rescue calls, according to the
report of Fire Chief Jeff Darst. Of
the 43 emergency runs, 35 were in
town and eight were out of town. All
vehicles were driven a total of
1,552.1 miles.

ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE

FUNDS RECEIVED
Gov. James A. Rhodes announced
the release of $15,999,935.49 in 1981
license tax revenues for distribution
among the state's 88 counties. Meigs
County's portion was $52,432.43.

Sign-up Saturday
Sign-up dale for the Rutland
Baseball League is Saturday.
Youths five through 15 before Aug. I
are to signup between 9 a.m. and
noon in front of the old Rutland gymnasium. The fee is $8. Officials advise that everyone must sign up and
no walkons will be accepted. Those
who are unable to make sign-up day
are to call either Marie Snyder, 9927377 or Joyce Bartrum, 992-!i634.

------...-..-------------------i

1

Mayor's Court
One defendant was fined and five
others forfeited bonds in the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
David E. Millhone, Tuppers
Plains, was fined $225 and costs and
was given a three day jail sentence
on chlirges of ·driving while intoxicated and was fined $250 and
costs on a possession of marijuana
charge.
Forfeiting bonds in the court were
Gregory A. Davis, Syracuse, and
Joseph H. Forbes, Point Pleasant,
$350, each on charges of driving
while intoxicated; Theodore V. Coppick, Portland, $150, resisting
arrest and $350, driving while intoxicated; Bonnie Whittington, Middleport, $29, speeding; Max Geary,
Middleport, $25, spinning tires.
Jack R. Neff, Middleport, was
lined $1,000 and costs on three
charges evolving from a high speed
chase with area police officers over
the weekend when he appeared
before Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night.
Neff was fined $500 and coats,
fleeing a police officer; $i50 anq
costs, reckless operation, and $350
and costs, driving while intoxicated.
In the same court Dennis Persons,
Long Bottom, was fined $50 and
C08IB on an open flask charge.
ForfeiUng bonds in the court
Tuesday night were Donald Roush,
Syracuse, $350, posted on a charge of
driving while intoxicated; Keith
Pbalin, Pomeroy, $150, reckless
operation; William Hayes, MiddleJ10rt, $50, failure to register a
motor vehicle; Randall Kimes, New
Haven, $30, left of center; Bruce
Hoffman, Pomeroy, PI, stop sign
violation; John Manley, Middleport,
~.spinning tires, and Greg Taylor,
no address recorded, $50, open flask.

CARPET
MILL ENDS

ToDAY

••• IN THEW

Studies shown no cancer link
BOSTON - The 'multibiJiion-dollar coffee industry says its studies
show no link between coffee and cancer, but a Harvard study Indicates
that people who drink a cup or two a day are nearly twice as likely as
non-drinker)! to get cancer of the pancreas.
Cancer of the pancreas is the fourth most common fatal malignancy
In the United States.
The Harvard researchers cautioned that although they found a
strong link between coffee drinking and the cancer, there was no proof
coffee causes the disease. They stopped short of advising people not to
drink it.

Gall may get execution
BENTON, Ky . - Kentucky could execute its first convicted
criminal in almost 19 years within the next two months, ac~rding to
Kentucky Supreme Court Judge Boyce Clayton.
Clayton referred to Eugene Gall, who faces II death sentence for the
rape and murder of a 12-year-old Cincinnati girl whose body was found
in Boone County AprilS, 1978.
The judge, reached at his Benton home Wednesday, predicted the
execution by electrocution could come that soon because of the U.S.
Supreme Court's refusal this week to hear Gall's arguments that he
wasdenllld a fair trlalln the case.

.COLUMBUS, Ohio- Wildlife officials, preparing to dot the heavily
farmed areas of Ohio with more than 100,000 acres of wlldllfe habitat,
say hunters - and not the state - will foot the blll.
Dave Urban, assistant administrator for wildlife management and
research in the Ohio Division of Wildlife, said the plan is due to start
July 1. It's estimated to cost $2.5 million annually for the next 20 years.
About 75 percent of the money will come from federal excise tax
collections on guns and ammunition, and 25 percent from the sale of
Ohio hunting licenses, he said.

LET INGELS STEAM CLEAN
YOUR CARPET

disorderly manner was second with
seven arrests made on that charge.
There were four charged with
speeding; three with assault and two
with leaving the scene. There was
one arrest each for intoxication;
criminal trespassing ; Jittering;
passing a school bus; driving in an
unsafe manner; driving under
suspension! and no operator's licen~
se.
Five cases were dismissed and the
police cruisers were driven 4,039
miles during the month. There were
178 parking meter tickets written.

CALL TOD'A Y FOR. APPOINTMENT

Tennessee man faces charges

INGELS FURNITURE
AND JEWELRY
"The Two In One Store"
·106 N. 2nd AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

ELKTON, Ky . - ATennessee man bas been charged with the June
JllSI murder-rape of a Guthrie woman, who was stabbed 'n times.
Norman Lee Graham, 34, of Port Royal, Tenn., was charged with
first-degree murder and first-degree rape in lndiclments returned
Tuesday by the grand jury In Tndd County Circuit Court.
Graham was lodged in T.odd County's jail without bond.
Sheriff Laurin Morris said the charge resulted from an eight-month
investigation Into the death of Janice Kay Williams, 21. The stabbing
took place jn her trailer home. ·
·

Winning Ohio lottery number

THE
CENTRAL TRUST
COMPANY

CLEVELAND - The winning number selected Wednesday night in
the Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Number" Is 983.
The lottery reported earnings of $614,766 from the wagering on the
drawing. Lottery officials said sales prior to the drawing totaled
$920,635.50, and holders of winning tickets are entitled to share
f30ij,869.50.

is INTERESTED in YOU!!

Weather

•

.

LOIS McELHINNY handles a wide rangeuf services and she's
interested in you.
YOU have seen Lois at the Bank in Middleport for the past 22 years.

Partly cloudy tonight and Friday. Lows tonight in the mid-30s. Highs
Friday ln upper 40s to low 50s. Chance of precipitation 10 percent
tonight and Friday. Winds westerly 10-20 mph tonight.
·
Extended Ohio Forecast- Saturday through Monday; Fair with
moderating temperatures through the period. Highs in the 30s Saturday, warming to the mid-50s and low 60s Monday. Lows 1~25 early
Saturday and upper 30s to low 40s early Monday.

SHE recognizes and understands your banking needs.
When you walkthrough the doors at CENTRAL TRUST to do your
banking business, you are sure of PERSONALIZED service, provided
.

by COMPETENT and EXPERIENCED PEOPLE. You receive
INDIVIDUAL attention.
CENTRAL TRUST is conveniently located at the comer of Second
Ave. and Race Street in Middleport. Do stop in and discover their
many banking services.
I

THAT'S·THE

CENTRAL

IDEA
MEMBER : FDIC

responsibUlty wllf fall upon the
Pakistan authorities," It said.
"We want the whole world to know
that this tragedy is because Zla Is an
American-Zionist agent and a
traitor to Pakistan," the Jetter continued.
Saying the Americans would be
shot if the demands were not met,
the letter added: "They are CIA
agents. I know everything about
them. Be prepared to collect their
bodies.''
"Zia ts not interestlld In the fate of
the passengers. All he wants is to
score political advantages," the letter said. "We are not elrtendihg the
deadline. If our demands are not
met after six hours, we !!hall take a

•

violent action."
The Slate Department has identified the Americans as Frederick
Hubbell of Des Moines, Iowa, Craig
Richard Clymore of California and
Lawrence Clifton Mangum of New
York City, but had no comment on
the CIA charge.
The gunmen are demanding the
release of (jozens of prisoners from
Pakistani jails, but the Pakistani
government has agreed to free only
a small grliup of inmates.
Pakistan's ambassador to Syria
expressed optimism earlier about
getting the hostages freed and said
he hoped to get the air pirates to extend their "final" deadline for
blowing up the plane, which was just

at y

hours away,
"I am optimistic. We are trying to
meet their conditions with certain
limitations. The point of the
negotiations is to get the passengers
out. At the same time, we will see if
we can get the deadline extended,"
the envoy, Maj. Gen. SarfarazKhan,
said 8li the 11 a.m. EST mark approached.
He spent about an hour at the airport talking with Syrian officials acting as intermediaries with the three
hijackers, went to the Syrian
Foreign Ministry for further consultations to clear up some uns~ifled poin~. then returned to the
airport.
.
Meanwhile, a young man at the

airport offered to talk" .to the
hijackers to see if he could end the
crisis. Syrian security men
questioned the mal\, in his 20s, and
waited to see whether the hijackers .
would accept his offer.
"I don't think the hijackers will
blow up the plane but I want to talk
with them and help end this problem
peacefully," the man said.
He said he was a Pakistani
studying at Damascus University,
that he was ~ political exile who
belonged to the Pakistan People's
Party, the group to which the
hijackers were believed to be
aligned, and that he also belonged to
the Palestine Liberation
Organization.

•

enttne
2 Sections~ 14 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 12,1981

Hunters will foot bill

DWI most common offense
Driving while intoxicated was the
most common. offense charged
among the 39 arrests made by the
Middleport Police Department
during February, according to the
monthly report of Chief J. J.
Cremeans.
Of the total arrests, I4 were
charged with drunken driving while

e

vlalble lor seveal mDes before gas plpellDe workers
could shut off the flow. The cause of the rupture and
fire have not been detennlog. (AP Laserpbolol.

(Continued from page I)
Reagan's proposals is expected to be
the ~mocratic-controlled House.
Democratic and Republican
leaders in the House have agreed on
ZANESVILLE, Ohio (AP) - Of- to transport natural gas from cottages were occupied at the time
a timetable tha\ would call for comof the accident.
pletion of action oo -the ad- ficials still are uncertain what sou them Texas to New York state.
The rupture occurred 50 feel from
The river surface and river bank
ministration's package of tax and caused a natural gas trunk line to
the
river's.shore, ripping up a 211-byrupture beneath the Muskingum appeared to bum as gas escaped unspending cuts by August.
20
foot
section of the river bed and
O'Neill said a bipartisan group of •River, sending flames 300 feel into der pressure for more than an hour
littering
the river bank with mussel
House leaders and C('nunittee chair- the air and visibl~ for 15 miles or before Texas Eastern officials turshells.
ned the gas off. Damage was limited
men would meet every two weeks to more.
Sheriff's deputies speculated that
to
the outsides of four summer or
Several
firemen
received
minor
monitor progress oo "Reagan's
an
auto exhaust could have ignited
injuries dousing fires in five river· weekend cottages in the Gaysport
program.
gas
fumes in the area , Ohio 60 runs
"Every time one of those dates bank cottages set ablaze when the area of southern Muskingum Counalong
the east bank of the river in
comes up and someihing isn't done, pipe ruptured shortly before 5 a.m. ty, but a fifth cottage nearest the
that
area.
blowout was destroyed. -None of the
we can say (to the Democrats), Tuesday.
A
spokesrll§n
in
the
Muskingum
'You're blowing it."' said a GOP
House aide who asked not to be iden- County sheriff's office said the 24- . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - inch high pressure line, owned by
tified by name. ·
Texas
Eastern Pipeline Co., is used
Jones said the timetable would
allow for completion of action on the
spending and the tax cuts by July 15.
"I'm expecting to have a vacation
in August," Jones said.
NO BURNED TRASH PLEASE
Leaders of both parties in the
Residents arc being asked by
Senate have said previously they
Meigs
County Commissioners not to
can complete work on the program
take
garbage
and trash to the land·
by the end of summer. ·
fill
that
has
been
burned unless they
The House leaders agreed that tax
are
sure
there
is
no
fire present.
and spending cuts will move on a
NEW SHIPMENT
fires
have
been started at
Several
parallel track through the House,
with floor action on spending cuts the landfill due to careless dilmping
anticipated shortly before a tax bill of cumed containers.
is taken up.

Meigs County happenings

TO END MARRIAGES
Two suits for dissolution of
marriage have been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
Filing for dissolution of marriage
were Rex Dean Vance, Rt. I, Hamden and Karen Delorse Vance, Rl
I, Hamden ; Carol Aull, Pomeroy,
and Dennis Ault, Pomeroy.

RIVER ON FIRE - A flame led by a ruplw'ed
natural gas Une sboolt Into the air from beneath the
Musldogum River near Zanesville, Ohio, Tuesday morning. The names reached nearly 300 feet blgh and w~re

Congress ·

P&gt;

EMERGENCY RUNS
Three runs were made by local
units on Tuesday, the Meigs
Emergency Medical Services reports. At 2:51a.m., the Racine Unit took
Terry Brewer, Bald Knob Road, to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 3:47
p.m., the Pomeroy Unit took Gladwin Weiner, Pomeroy Health Care
Center, to Holzer Medical Center
and the Pomeroy Unit treated
Patricia Hill at Royal Oak Park .

""he letter was written by the"chief
j1cker, identified as Moujlr
Ghoulam, deputy commander of AI
Zulflkar. The organization i.s
believed to be made up of supporters
of Zulllkar All Bhutto, the prime
minister hanged in Aprl11979 by the
current Pakistani regime of Mohammed Zia ui-Haq.
The letter was handed to Syrian
mediators six hours before the
deadline was to expire. The
hijackers wbo seized the jet 11 days
ago already have kllled one of their
captives, a Pakistani dipiomat.
"Only six hours are left and there
is stiU no answer from the Pakistani
government to our requests," the
letter said. "If our demands are not
met, the result wlll be hard and full
1

WINS SAFETY AWARD - For the third conaecuttve year, the
Philip Spora Plant (Central Operallo&amp; COIDJIIny) Wll the WIDDer of
the 11r1e pllat c1te1ory Ia &amp;be 1880 Amerlcu Electric Power S)'ltem
aiUIIUII oafel)' competiUoa. Their last dlnbltac lajury occurred Feb.
n, 1178. E. H. Glou, left, plaat manager, accepts a trophy from AEP
Chairman W. S. White, Jr.

___ \ ____ _

1

1sCents

A Multimedia Inc. Newsoa er

Repair
answer
unknown
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Members of a Senate committee
generally agree more money Is
needed to repair Ohio's
deteriorating highways, but they're
unsure if a gasoline tax hike plan is
the route to follow.
Sens. Paul E. Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus,
and Richard H. Finan, R-Cincinnati,
told the Senate Highways and Transportation Conunitlee that their plan
initially would yield about $178
million In new revenue for the
money-short Ohio Department of
Transportation.
Their proposal would raise the
current 7-cents-per-gallon state
gasoline tax by 3.34 cents during its
first year of operation. The tax
would lise to a projected level of
11.61 cents in 1982.
Three-fourths of the money would
be earmarked for the state, with the
rest distributed among cities, counties and townshipe.
Under their plan, the present pergallon tax would remain in effect.
But boosts in the levy over the next
four years would be triggered by a
formula reflecting national highway
maintenahl'f and operation costs
and gasoline consumption levels.
The formula· is based on an annual
Index of the Federal Highway Administration which measures labor,
material, equipment and overhead
costs for highway maintenance.
" Our highway system has been
deteriorating at an accelerated pace
over the last few years," Pfeifer
said Wednesday, Revenue from the
current gasoline tax bas fallen sharply for the past 20 months, partially
because motorists are driving less.
Committee work on the proposal
came as the House prepared to vote
next week on an austerity-level, n~
new-taxes budget for ODOT during
the fiscal year which begins July 1.
Lawmakers must deal with the
politically sensitive problem promptly, Finan said.
"If we don't do something by 1982,
and more importantly by 1984, those
constituents who today are concerned about gasoline taxes are
going to be even more concerned
about highways that are im·
passable," Finan sald.
But some GOP members of the
panel questioned use of the formula
and whether a tax Increase was
needed.
"You're going to bave to convince
me the people are willing to support
a tax Increase 8li opposed to a
redistribution of funds that are
already there," said Sen. Wllllam J.
Reas, R-New Philadelphia.
Two statewide groups of county offlclats endorsed the pending blll, but
said more money Is needoo to deal
with the problem.
"We do not believe the size of tbe
increase is going to be sufficient to
meet all of our minimum
requirements," sald Lowell McCarty, president of the County
Engineers Association. "On the
other hand, .. . we realize there Is a
limit to the amount of Increase thai
the Legislature can put on at one
time."
Richard McFarland, legislative
liaison for the County Commissioners Association, sald some
form of motor fuel tax hike is needed
inunedlately. "I think today it's
fairly obvious we have to bring our
roads and bridges up to some standard," he said.
Sen. Theodore M. Gray, R·
Colurnbua, committee chairman,
said the panel probably will co111lder
the poulblltty of comblntnc a fuel
tax Increase with the HOlM version
of tho; lranaportatlon buclatt

BREAKFAST MEETING
President Ronald are: House Minority Leader Robert MJcbel, R-ID. ;
Reagan holds a breakfast meeting Thursday at the Reagan; Rep. James Courter, R·N.J. and Rep. Donald
White House with members of the Congressional Ritter, R·Pa. :(AP Laserpboto)
sophomore class from the Republican party. From left

U. S. ·backs junta's
stand in El Salvador
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador
(AP) - El Salvador's junta told the
other Latin American governments
not to meddle in its war against the
leftist guerrillas, and the United
States supported its stand.
"The revolutionary government of
El Salvador does not desire the intervention of the Organization of
American States In the search for a
solution to thti internal problems In
El Salvador," the junta said.
The message, delivered Wednesday by El Salvador's ambassador in Washington, Ernesto
Peralta, called an OAS mediation of•

fer "completely unacceptable" and
rejected "any ad ho~ action by the
OAS."
The United States boycotted the
session on grounds that El Salvador
rejected any OAS role, said Ambassador Jose Rafael Echeverria of
Costa Rica, whose government
suggested mediation last week and
sponsored the meeting.
Chile, Uruguay and Argentina also
were absent due a "iack of instruction," Echeverria said.
Those attending were Barbados,
Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Costa
Rica, Ecuador, Granada,

Guatemala,
Mexico,

Haiti,

Nic.a ragua,

Honduras,
Panama,

Paraguay, Peru, Surinam, Trinidad
and Venezuela.
Salvadoran troops battled the
guerrill.as to the north and east of
San Salvador and in and around the
capital Wednesday.
El Salvador military sources said
there were casualties in recent battles, but gave no figures.
Guerrillas of the Farabundo Marti
National Liberation Movement said
they ambushed a military patrol in
San Vicente, 90 miles east of San
Salvador and killed five soldiers.

Heartwarming experience--Reagan
WASHINGTON (AP)- President Canadians, such as withdrawal of a some of the rough edges showed, by
Reagan, describing his first state fishing treaty. He replied: "While and large It was a successful trip."
visit as a "very heart-wanning experience," says he and Canadian
Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau
established "a basis for further
working together" even though differences remain between the two
North American neighbors.
The Canadians sald Reagan,
without giving guarantees, eased
their fears that his proposed budget
cuts and policy changes would hurt
projects important to their country.
Friction over U.S. Involvement in El
Salvador and Reagan's withdrawal
of a fishing treaty also seemed to
have been lessened.
'
In a televised speech Wednesday
to the Canadian Parliament, Reagan
pledged to revitailzed the U.S.
economy and said that would restore
the confidence of allies and produce
millions of jobs, many of them in
Canada.
7
The speech was repeatedly ln·
terrupted by applause, ending
Reagan's tw&lt;Miay trip on a high
note. l-Ie had been dogged by
hecklers earlier in Ottawa.
After returning to the White
House, Reagan said he and Trudeau
had "a very fine meeting, really. I
think we established the basis for
further working together. We were .
very pleased and I think they were,
too - a very heart-warming experience."
Earlier, on the return flight to
FUNERAL FOR ATLANTA CHILD VICTIM- Ca1ket contalner
Washington, presidential aide
the body of Curtis Walker, latest victim lD the murdered aad missing
Michael Deaver was asked whether
Atlanta children cases, is carried from tbe luneral home after aervices
the trip had bl!eri hampered by
held Wedoelday In Atlanta. His mother, Ms. Catbertae Leach, is
aevll'lll U.S. acllona opposed bv the
shown as she ls helped leaving the church. (AP Lalerphoto) ·

------- - - - ---·

'I

�Thursday, March 12,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily sentinel

Page-3

~~~=---------------~~~~~----~-------2~~~~-

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel ,
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday. March 12,1981

Paying as we

g~~o______________~_Ja_m_es_J._.
Kilpatrick

WASHINGTON - So much com- are Intended to cover serious of
Mr. Reagan now expecl.! to send a
thusand dollars" a year. The
ment has focused upon Mr. . direct, personal benefit to the users. bill to the House this month that
proceeds would offset the direct
Reagan's proposala for reducing Mr. Reagan sees no good reason why would hike the tax from four cents to
costs of navigation lights, buoys and
federal outla)'llthat his proposals for a yacht owner shuldn't contribute 29 cents a gallon, effective July I. If
rescue helicopters. By 19116, sa)'ll
raising federal revenues have been something toward the cost.! incurred Congress goes along, the Inland
OMB, revenues should approach
almost overlooked. The president by tbe Coast Guard in maintaining Waterways Trust Fund would gain
$500 million.
want.! to ral.!e "user fees" on Inland navigational aids and rescue by $306 million in fiscal '82. The Of.
In a third area, the administration
waterways, coastal waterways and operations. The president has a good flee of Management and Budget
will ask higher fees from airlines
airport.!. His recommendations are point.
says the increase would be. less than
and from general aviation, Intended
For many years the nation's barge 0.4 cents per ton mile for the shipprobably too optimistic, but they
to cover a larger portion of the cost
operators paid nothing at all toward pers. It seems a reasonable charge
make great good sense.
of maintaining our air control
Specifically, Mr. Reagan will ask the cost of maintaining the locks and for use of a $6 billion system.
system. The proposal embraces new
Congress for Increased taxes on channels of the inland waterway
Anthony L. Kucera, head of
taxes on aviation fuel, passenger
barge operators, airlines and system. After a prolonged fight, the · American Waterways Operators,
tickets and freight waybills. By the
private plane owners. He will ask 96th Congress imposed a tax of four Inc., says his members generally
new fees on the owners of yacht.!, cent.! a gallon on barge fuel. By the will support the president, if- if Mr.
recreational craft and merchant government's estimates, the Reagan's user fees are in fact
proceeds will meet only 11 percent of equitably distributed across the ·
vessels.
In each case, the taxes and fees these maintenance cost.! in 1981.
whole of the transportation industry.
Mr. Kucera adds that if user fees
have become the name of the game,
municipalities and lndustries that
take water from the inland system,
either for drinking purposes or for
111 Cout Slrel!l
industrial use, also should be hit for
Pomeroy t Ohio
116-tl!.-2151
'
a
share of the cost. Such an exDEVOTED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
tension would compllcate a simple
tax bill, but it's hard to argue with
his reasoning.
The fees proposed for an
estimated nine million boat owners
are based on the same line of
ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
thought. This year the taxpayers
PYblltbcr
will put up $1.3Jlilllon to finance the
PATWIUTEHEAD
BOB HOEFLICH
U. S. Coast Guard. A part of this
AltiaUI PablUber/CoutroUer
Geaenl Ma111ger
, outiay, of course, is of general
benefit for law enforcement,
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
weather forecasting, coastal
News Editor
security and the like. But the bulk .of
the cost benefits only a small
A MEMBER of Tht Allotllkel Prft1, lDJaad Dally Prell AIIOCiatloa 1Dd tiM!
segment of the public.
, ~~~~~~~)~~
Amerirsa Newtpiper Publlthen A,.ociiUoa. .
·
Mr. Reagan's idea is to impose "'
lEITERS OF OPINION Ire welcomed. T11ey 1bOG.Id be Ins lhaa 311 wordlloq. AU
modest fees, ranging from $10 to $30
~ are tubjetl to edJUq aDd mutt be tlped wttll name, .cktreu ud telepltoae
a year for most boat owners.
~~amber. No Ullped letten •W be publbh@d. Le«en should be la &amp;ood ta1te, Jddrettlal
ilnel, ... pteriCIIIIlJtifl.
Operators of commercial vessels
would pay "several hundred or a

OMB's estimate, these taxes would
generate f3.3 billion in new revenues
in fiscal '82 and as much as $5.2
billion In !986.
Taken as a whole, Mr. Reagan's
plan adrnlttedly would impose some
additional burdens upon consumers.
The barge operators, for example,
haul 700 million tons of freight every
year, chlefiy In petroleum, coal,
building materials, chemicals and
grain. Presllll18bly the eXpense of
higher fuel taxes would be passed
along. The alrllnes, already hard ·

pressed by mounting fuel COBia, can
be expected to reslat any propoul to
raise passenger fares even higher.
But the president's basic contention Is convincing: We never will
get out of the economic meas without
belt-tightening all along the line.
More than 150 years ago, Johll Randolph of Roanoke startled the HOllie
by crying, "Mr. Speaker! I have
discovered the philosopher's atone. ,
It is ibis, Sir - Pay as you go! Pay ·
as you go! " The 'rule Ia as wtae now
as it was then.

.

\. ~-

'\~~\1

"

\

The Daily Sentinel

Reagan roulette
In Reagan roulette, there are 18 winners, some disgruntied losers, and
nothing really changes very much.
That's the way it worked out when President Reagan held his first
question-by-lottery news conference - a system that drew some sarcastic complaints.
.
After all, it's something of a put down to have names drawn from a
jellybean jar to ask questions at a White House news conference. What's
even worse, at least in the eyes of some of the losers, is not to be drawn at
all.
A handful of White House reporters stayed away from Friday's session
because they knew they wouldn't get to ask questions. Actually, the 18
people who did ask questions covered what would have been covered
anyhow.
Besides, the major news tlisclosed at the news conference had nothing
to do with the questions. Reagan announced it without prompting, in an
opening statement saying that he plans to impose federal employment
ceillngs to reduce the projected payroll by $1.3 billion over the nert two
years.
"And now, shall we get on with our first attempt at Reagan roulette?"
the president joked.
He then answered questions for a half-hour, de!lling with six on U.S.
milltary aid to El Salvador, five on the economy and his programs to deal
with It, 10 on other topics.
Later on, the president said he kept waiting for would-be questioners to
wave their ann.s for recognition, which is. the way it used to be done
before Reagan's rules of order.
At his first news conference, reporters were told to keep their seats and
raise their hands, instead of jumping up and down and shouting "Mr.
Prealdent" a lot. That stllled the clamor. Reporters for The Associated
Press and United ~ International asked the first two questions, as is
traditional. White House correspondents for each of the three major
televillon networks were recognized to ask questions at that session.
Prealdents go into news conferences thoroughly briefed, preparw to
handle almost any foreseeable question.
A well-framed question can require a president to focus on an Issue he
might prefer to avoid. For example, at Friday's session, Rellgan was
:asked whether he has decided what to do about the Soviet grain embArgo,
which remains in effect although he opposed it as a candidate. He said
he'd like to Uft it but the International situation has changed and "we
haven't reached a decision."
But what's really important are the answers, not the questions. The
prealdent con\I'OIB them, and always will, whatever the fonnat.
Nationally televised news conferences do not lend themselves to the kind
of cross-examination which might pry out disclosures the president l.!n't
ready to make.
That isn't going to change, whether the questions are asked by those' ·
who shout loudest or by those whose flllmes are drawn from a jelly bean
'jar.
·

Letter to the edl•tOr

How much more?
Well, Americans, I wonder how
much longer our Elected Government will neglect the working taxpayer.
He works everyday and comes
home to see his table full of gas and
other billl and then sits down to watch thelia o'clock news and hears of
the government giving a foreign
country millions of our tax dollars.
Now that's too much for a taxpayer to take. If our govet'll(llent
Clll't give us a 30 percent tax cut,
how do they give those foreign counlrlll mllllo111 of our tax dollars? It's
coming of time to thnk of the
AmeriCIII people, not the foreign
countries. You know as well as I do
that when the money stops going to
them the frlendahlp will end and that
II a proven fact and the United
States can't afford to buy friencil.
We, the tupayers of this big and

great country, won'tstandtorthisas
we see our programs being cut and
. we don't see the foreign aid being
cut. If our . president iB to cit
programs, he is going to have to cut
them aU, not just some.
A1l far as the congress saying 11
doesn't see a tax cut for the taxpayers this year, well that is Ita way
ol saying no tax cut for us. We, the
American people, will some day in
the near future finally say that' alt.
we won't pay anymore taxes and
that's when the fireworks will go off.
Well, lam not saying It's time but
someone has to let the word out 80
the government will open up ita ears
tollstentous.
Americans, keep after your
Congressman for a tax · cut and
may be, jus t maybe , sameday we
't pa anymo •·- than hat
Won
Y
re wues
W
in
were pay g now.
Yours Truly
Floyd H. Cleland
Box 223, Rutland, Ohlo 40770

Today in history. • •
In 1988, General Suharto was sworn in as acting President of Indonesia
liter Prelident Sukamo was stripped of his authority.
In 1987, Indira Gandhi was chosen unanimously as leader of India's
eon,r- Party, becoming prime minister.

\

'\

dlstnct's Class AAA Player of the
Year by a panel of sports writers
and broadcasters.
·
Veris, the district's Lineman of
the Year in football last fall,
averaged almost 20 rebouncil and
17.3 point.! for the Cav(lliers this winter. The 1980 slate shot put and
discus·champion is headed for Stanford UDiversity on a football scholar·
ship.
In Class AA, Robbie Jackson was
named the area's Player·of the Year
and John Eaton of Wheelersburg its
leading coach.
In Class A, Neil Leist of Beaver
Eastern was voted the district's
Player of the Year title wltile Art
Myers of Peebles and Larry Jordan
ofRichmond · Dale Southeastern
shared the coaching honors.
Jackson, a 6-6 senior center, sank
almost 56 perce1,1t of his fioor shots

president about U.S..SOviet relation&gt;
and the fighting in El Salvador .
That, apparently, was not part of
the White House plan. For almost as
soon as the president's responses
turned to foreign pollcy, Meese and
Baker left their seal! in the back of
the auditorium, edged forward, and
made it clear that it was time for
them, and the president, to leave.
He made his exit within minutes.
The Reagan White House has
become particularly concerned
about the decorwn of reporters
covering the president.
When Margaret Thatcher, the
prime minister of Great Britain,
visited Washington, there were no
ifs, ands, or buts about whether
those assigned to cover the state din-

wear

ner in her honor would have to
formal attire. They did.
When It appeared that one
correspondent, assigned at the last
minute to the event, would not be
properly diessed - and a dark
business suit just would not do, be
was lhfonned by first lady Nancy
Reagan's staff- a solution had to be
found.
Sheila Patton, Mn. Reagan's
press secretary, who lnlsted on the
formal wear, offered to have a
tuxedo waiting at the White Houae
for the reporter.
He managed, at the last minute, to
come up with one on his own, and did
not have to take advantage Df her
generosity.

troiB eight months before they were
scheduled to die had given inflation
an upward kick and would cost consumers SIO billion In higher fuel
prices.
He said the Congressional Research Service estimated the impact of
higher fuel costs on basic commodities would boost inflation 1.1
percent to I. 4 percent.
Senate Minority Leader Robert C.
Byrd, !).W.Va., said the Defense
Department has estimated early
decontrol added $256 million to the
department's fuel costs - "enough

nings , and they were llmited to one
hit in three innings worked by Minetto.
The A's didn't hit with much
power last year, but they got some
Wednesday from rookie outfielder
Mike Patterson, who broke a 1-1 tie
with a bases-empty home run in the
fourth. Patterson also doubled in a
run in the second.
The Detroit Tigers also had a successful day as they broke into two
squads and won twice.
Jack Morris allowed only one hit
in a five-inning stint as the Tigers
beat the Chicago White Sox 9-3.
Morris allowed one unearned run,
in the fourth inning, on an error and
a run-scoring single by Wayne Nordhagen, who later hit a two-run
homer for the White Sox.
The Tigers jumped on Britt Burns
for five runs in the first two innings,
three of them on a homer by Tom
Brookens. Stan Papl and John

TAMPA, Fla . (AP) - Nick
Esasky hit more home runs than
anybody else in the Cincinnati Reds
baseball organization last year. His
30 homers for Class AA Waterbury,
Conn., was tops in the Eastern
League, and the Reds e•pect him to
get stronger as he matures.
"He's in the class of Johnny Bench
and George Foster," said Ted
KluS'Zews~i, the Reds' strongman
batting 'instructor. "He's only 21, so
he's going to get bigger and
stronger.'•'
That's high tribute for a young

:•
'oi

'11MB~
,~,1..111~ .
011 '111t: HON'Ill

TEAM

-

Garin

Veris,

la

Another Detroit squad beat the
Boston Red Sox 6-4 as Richie Hebner
collected four hits - a homer,
double and two singles - and drove
In three runs. Former Michi«!ln football star Rick Leach slamhled a
homer and a single for the Tigers.
Mark Brouhard hit a two-run
homer in the eighth inning to give
the Milwaukee Brewers a 6-5 victory
over Cleveland.
AI Ollver's double and Buddy
Bell's single drove In three runs in

the fifth Inning to give the Texas
Rangers a 4-3 victory over the New
York Yankees. New York rallied in
the ninth, scoiing two runs and putting on two baserunners with two
outs before Tucker Ashford grounded out to end the game.

'

to recommission the batueahlp New
Jersey."
Metzenbaum said the administration was wrong lri Ita cillirn
that removing the controls in
January, Instead of waiting for the
Sept. 30 phaseout, would encourage
exploration and production and
would promote conservaUon.
Bumpers noted that crude aU
prices jumped from S10.71 tof23.90a
barrel between May 1979 and May
1980. Instead of Increasing, domestic
oil production declined :m,OOO
barrels a day during that period,
Bumpers said.

Tournament scores
At Ad.

Ohio H.S. Hoya Ra' ketblll
D11trtd Tourumeatl

Napoleon 62, Delpho. St. John 55
AI Elyril

Wed.aHdaly's RtsuUa

Brooklyn te. Elyria West 43

ClASSAAA

AISteubeavlUe Areu

Atilt~•

Cleve. Mlm hall H, l.akewoOO So.
ward 116
Atl.ol'lllnKJI:IJI
Lorain Southview 72, Mldvlew M
.
AI M•ph~ Jlf'lghts
Cleve, Hay 75, Cleve . lit:;. 69
AI Euclid
Mayfield 67, Ea3Uake North
C~tntoo

Ed·

~

AtStrul.llt:rl
Wiirren Hardmg 63, BtlllrdrnAn 52
AtCoplty

~ . B.Hrbertun •2. OT
AlRowllqCrt8
Wapakoof'ta M, ~ans. M11labar 58

Wad.:lwurth

CLASSAA
AI C.a&amp;oa FtddlUJUie
C.v.fWIII •,ulton NW 74, F'alrles.'l 66
Orl"\\ille n, Akron Coventry 57

There are some things about his ters and planes, more sensor it, "breeds illegality."
and discussed before - notably
new job that President Re~gan is not systems and other surface equipNone of ibis is by any means news. worker Identification, which
goingtollke.
ment.
The problem of illegal inunigration suggestsanationalldentltycardand
One of them is on his desk right
This is only one of the ways the and the lnadequa~y of the un- could pose a civil rights Jsaue. And
now In the form of a select com· commission would have us begin ad· derstaffed inunigration system a~d so have the additional questions the
mission report on inunigration dressing a national problem of arbitrary, outdated laws under would-beanawerlralae.
pollcy. It Ia a new look at an old dhpenslons correctly noted as vast. which it opjlrates are well-known
Would even 1 muslvely and ex·
problem, a 453-page tome, two years
Illegal aliens currently resident in and much-advertised.
pensively expanded Border Patrol
in the complllng, that among other the United States are estimated to
Neither has the commission come be up to the task given the IIJIIlllll
things calls for the expanditure of
number from 3.5 million to 6 million up with much new In the way of an- to be gusrded and the hiiman numadditional federal dollars to deal (other studies go as high as 12 swers to the problem. In addition to hers Involved? "Border" lllually
with an influx of illegal inunigration million) .
tighter border control, It recom- means the 1,500-mlle one with
thatlt finds "out of control."
The continuing fiow has created mends better Identification of all Mexi~ where the problem 11 lllOit
II! timing could not be more "an underclass of w~rkers," fearing workers in the United States, legal Intense. But the commlulon obexquisite - in the micilt of the new deportation and at the mercy of un- action against employers hiring un- serves that "probably ... I • than
adrnlnistraiton's Operation Budget scrupulous employers. The most documented workers, an Increase in half" of the llle&amp;al lmmlaranta are
Trimming.
devastating impact of the violation legal immigration ceilings and an of MeKican nationality. AI IIIII!)' Cl'
How many dollars 1B not specified, of inunigration law may be the amnesty for tllegal resident.! now in more come from the Caribbean,
but It would take quite a few to get disregard it breeds for minimum the country once· more effective imAnd given even llmlted aucceuln
evenagoodstartonarecommended wage, occupational safety, public migration control meuures are in controlling thill!IOit Mlllltlve bol"
strengthening of the border control health and other U. S. laws. effect.
der, what would be the effect 011
with more personnel. more helicop- "lliegallty," as the conunisslon puts
Much of ibis has been pr~ed u .S.-Mexlcan ' relatlonl • .
.-----------, .-----------. ·---------,
IIIIO.IOIICI:IIE /.I.EIJ..,KJP. IU 7fU
/I.EU, /.A5T ll!IJ'M8ll?. 7Jili TA/JIES
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)()) aJJPN'T )()}. lfl&lt; YIJAR';.
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MA/O;W - ftAIJ.MMilY, /JI6f!U51·
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5111:1.1. /oEJI/5"' D•"fr'" ~ n~" _
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mgs, Mont.,

AtAa~Dd

Buckeye Central 47, S. Central 42
AI CbiWeot.he
Beaver Eastern 13, Peebles 12, 20T
At UDY Sealor
Ada, 70, F'ort Recovery 5Z
AtN1poleoa
Stryker 68, Holgate 6Z
AI Flodlly
Vt~n Buren &amp;4 , Fostoria St. Wendelln 49
AtEIIU
Oltoville 54, Leipsic 52

Al W•rrea Wea&amp;rru R~rvr
As hl..llbula Harbor 6:i, Bruukllt!ld 59
WM!'T'f:n Kennedy Ill , Newton FHIIs 70
AI Columbw Col111eum
Bexley 70, Ucking VRI . 5..1
WestiRll 117. Plea1umt 32

ReJioaal Tou.rumea&amp;l

Wedaetday'• Retlllll
CLA88AAA.
At Uatven.tty ol Daytoa F1e&amp;dboPt

Day . PatteT100 5t, Oay. Stebbiru 33
Cln. Oak Hill 64, Cin. Mercy 4:1
CLASSAA

AtMuoWoa PerryHilbS&lt;bool
Canton Catholic 13, Badger tl
OlnlSted F1ll:s a:;, Petersburg Spring. $()

At Le:rtqton

l

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Casey Kasem
WMPO

SATURDAYS
8 til Noon

Fram1399

Larry

Jordan,

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Phillips, in pouch . MMTS4

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9 tO·ll and 1 to 5

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STORY &amp; STORY.
ATTORNEYS AT LAW

hasa power
to all fields
and
hasEsasky
become
fan favorite
in spring
training because of his tapemeasure shots in batting practice.
"It took me time to get the swing I
wanted," he said. "Before, I was
shifting my weight more to my front
foot. Now, I just sit back and wait."
Esasky, a third baseman,
probably will play for the Reds'
Class AAA Indianapolis team this
year. Kluszewski said there's no
telling how fast he'll make it to Cincilinati.
"Some take awhile, others develop
quickly," Kluszewskl said. "He has
developed quickly so far. He's
definitely a prospect.n

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Class A

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Upper Sandll.lk)' 74, Huron 47
At Toledo Wit If'
Kansall Llkota . 51. OreijM Stritch 43

r---------,

Peeb.les,

Art Myers,

"

FIX·IT
KIT

but it was there that he got the bug to Dale soulhoastem.
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••
be al'Ve
power
hitter. been a
fJ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
always
type hitter," Esasky said. "I woo.oldl
hit the bau hard, but it wasn't until
was at Billings that I starteilltitting I
for distance."
As a 14-year-old quarterback,
Esasky Injured an ann. He started
lifting weights to rebuild the ann,
and began to shift his sports emphasis from football to baseball.
Theswitchmadehisfatherhappy.
"My dad was always enthusiastic
about It," Esasky said. "There were
13 kids in his family, so he always
had to work. He loved baseball, but
never had lime to play.
S
L S
d
"I was the fourth of six kicil, and
teven • tory an Karen H. Story
the first boy. My Dad thanked the
236 w. 2nd, Pomeroy, Oh.
doctor when I was born, because I
(Formerly Meigs Gen. Hospital)
was a boy."
Office Ph. 992·6624
Home Ph. 992-3523

CLASS A

,

~7

AI Caaton Auditorium
McKinley &amp;1, Akron Gllrfield

Buckeye S. 69, Glenn M, OT
Coshocton 5~. St. Clairsville 39

arm

Leist, Bea·

;

"

First Team

U e

round draft choice .In June 1978, he "'f!;&gt;J.vi~ ~F ~~i.R - Neil
hit just four home runs with the ver Eastem.
Reds' f
( b · B'll'
CO.COACHES OF YEAR ~

'

Dale Teaford

Osborne, Chilliwthe, 0..9 !ir., 13.1:

Wheelersburg.
CLASS A
• '
FIRST TEAM Neil Leist, Beaver
Eastern, &gt;9 Sr , 21.0: Rid&lt; Scarberry,
Green. . 6-3 Sr., 20.7; Steve Kasland,
Adena, 1-4 &amp;-., 22.2; Kelly Copeland,
PeebiOI, ~ Sr., 19.1: Dale Toalord, Ra·
cine Soothem, &amp;-2 Sr., 11.7; and Mike
R!Jback, Trimble, 6-2 Sr., 19.9.
,
SECOND TEAM - Bol&lt;:h Dole, Rich- ,
mond Dale Southeastern, 6-6 Jr., 16.5;
David Gagai, lronto11 St. Joseph, ~ Sr.,
17.2: TOdd Willlama, ~k Hill, fl.3 Sr.,
17.5; Dean Bemthold, South Web:ster, S.l
Sr., 17.0: Mark lmmell, Paint Valley, 6-1
Sr., 16.1; and Mike. Mendenhall, Hunt-

.
.'
.
"

\

I

Chlllt

SECOND TEAM Klril McDonald,
Miami Trace, 6-4 Sr., 18.:1 ; Alan Went%,
Lancuter, ~11 Sr., 18.0i Jeff [)()let,
Chillicothe, 6-1 Sr., 9.8; ~u Riggs,
Athem, Mod. Sr., 14.5; 8Jll Dave Bell,
~an, 6-4 Sr. ,, 11!1.9.
ifLAYER CF YEAR - Garin Veru.
Cbllllcothe.
roooACHES OF YEAR - Tom CU!Jr
pett,
Chillicothe,
and
FTed
Gtbsoii(
Athens.
CLASSAA.
FIRST TEAM - Robbie Jackson, Hills~
boro, &amp;-4! Sr., lU; John Jeffers, Wellston ~
6-2 Sr., 23.2; Phil Mayle, VIncent Warren,
6-foot Sr., 23.8; ChrU Gentry, PortsmoutJI
6-i Jr., 18.0: Bob Shaw, Wheelersburg,
Sr ., H.5; and Chris Barnes , Ironton, ~ ,
Sr ., 21.7.
SECOND TEAM - Rick Milburn, Jack~
· 100, W Sr., 17.9; Alan Bums, Fairland, 6l
5 Sr., 16.1f; Brian Price, Hillsboro, ~ Sr.,
11.2; Ron Fumier, Portsmouth West, 6-3
Jr., 2U; Craig Carpenter, New Lexington, 6-2 Sr., lU i and Mike BDbo, . Alexander, 6-3 Frosh., IU.
PLAYER OF YEAR - RObbie Jackson ,
Hillsboro.
COAClf CF YEAR John Eaten.,

-.

...

COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) - The Associ·
ated Prey' 19CU Ohio Southeastern Dt&amp;trlct bvys hlsh school basketball all-stat"!,
selected by a dl8trict panel of sports
writers :
CI..ASSAAA

FIRST

Wockenfuss both had three hits and
two RBI for Detroit.

player who, at 6-foot-3 and 190 pounds, lacks the bulging muscles of a
serious body builder.
"He has big, strong hancil and arms," said Kluszewski, one of the
.Reds' all-time leading sluggers.
"Basically, hitting is from the
elbows down - the forearms, the
wrists, the hands."
Esasky's right-handed swing has
the style of a classic power hitter.
"He's got a big, sweeping swing.
It's just powerfuL It's a home run
swing," Kluszewskl said.
Esaskv didn't hit many homers in
high school in Florida. A1l a first

OlloH.S. Girb -elMO

VIIOCA!ION rY MY/JHU Uf'f!. !

team this winter.
With Varis on the Class AAA alldistrict first team were Scott
Barrows of Marietta, Steve Bruning
of Athens, Lee Osborne of
Chillicothe and Todd Nibert of
Gallipolis.
Eaton's teammates tin the Class
AA all-district first unit were John
Jeffers of Wellston, Phil Mayle of
Vincent Warren, Chris Gentry Of
Porl.!rnouth, Bob Shaw of Wheeler·
sburg and Chris Barnes of Ironton.
Besides Leist, the area's first
team Class A squad consisted of
Rick Scarberry of Green, Steve
Ragland of Adena, Kelly Copeland of
Peebles, Dale Teaford of Racine
Southern and Mike Roback of Trim·
ble.

rothe, 8-foot~ Sr., 17.3 points per game;
Sc..'Uil Barrows, Marietta , ~ Sr., 20.0;
Steve Brunilll. A~, 6-4 Soph., 20.5;

Esasky--future Reds' power hitter

New president, old problem..__.__Do_n_G_ra_ff

iJWcVW IN..

and more than 110 percent of his free
throws, pacing Hillsboro to a 1~1
regular season record. He averaged
14.8 points and 17.1 rebounds.
Eaton led Wheelersburg to an 18-2
record that Included 17 straight
triumphs to close the regular
season.
Leist, a ~9 senior guard and tw&lt;&gt;time all-district selection, broke the
Eastern school scoring record with
I, 149 career points.Jle averaged 19.2
points, hitting 54 percent of his field
goal attempts and 80 percent of his
foul shots.
Myers led Peebles to 20 straight
regular season victories and second
straight Southern Hills League title.
He also was the Class A
Southeastern District Coach of the
Year.
Jordan, in his loth season at
Southeastern after playing for the
~ass County school, turned out a t7·3

and Todd Nibert, Gallipolis, 6-4 Sr., 10.9.

By The Associated Press
Steal home, try the suicide
squeeze and get tight pitching.
That's "Billy Ball," and Billy Martin and the Oakland A's don't wait
until the season staris fo play that
way.
The A's beat the Taiyo Whales of
the Japanese major league 6-4 Wed·
nesday by playing the kind of
baseball Martin taught them last
year when he made them a winning
team.
Brian Doyle stole home in the fourth inning on a double steal, and
another A's run came home on Dave
McKay's squeeze bunt in the sixth.
Last season the A's stole home seven
times and had 16 successful squeeze
plays.
Good pitching, another A's
trademark in 1980, was provided by
Mike Norris and left-bander Craig
Minetto. The Whales got only an
unearned run off Norris in three in-

Senate opponents threaten filibuster
WASHINGTON (AP) -Senate opo warning that a bill to dl)Control
ponenl.! are threatening a fillbuster natural gas would bring a fill buster.
if the Reagan adrnlnlstration follows
Metzenbaum's amendment, which
through on its stated intention to would have restored the oil price
press for removal of price controls controls President Reagan lifted
from natural gas.
Jan. 28, wasdefeated68-24 Tuesday.
" This body (Senate) will be in
It was Metzenbaum's second atsession a long time if they try to tempt at ',' recontrol." Last month,
decontrol natural gas," Sen. Howard he filed a court suit to try to void
M. Metzenbaum, l).()hio, said Reagan's decontrol order. A federal
Tuesday.
judge refused to grant , the ternSen. . Don Riegle, !).Mich., and . porary order Metzenbaum and other
Dale Bumpers, !).Ark., who joined parties to the suit sought.
Metzenbaum In an effort to restore
In the Senate debate, Metzenbaum
controls on oil, also joined him in said Reagan's order ending oil con-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Tom
Cuppett likely will remember his
last Ohio boys ltigh school basketball
coaching season for the rest of his
life.
·
Cuppett, who is quitting coaching
Ia become Chillicothe's athletic
director next .school year, led the
CavalierS to 19 straight regular
season victories and the state's No.3
ranking.
•
He also was named one of two winners of The Associated Press'
Southeastern Class AAA District
Coach of the Year honors Wednesday. He shares the award with
Fred Gibson of Athens, who coached
the Bulldogs to an 18-2 mark and
their first Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League championship in 11
seasons.
Cuppett's star, 6-fooH, 230-pound
center Garin Veris, was voted the

Hustling A's steal game

Top aides assume 'protection ,' role
WASHINGTON (AP) - When
Rather than use James S. Brady,
Ronald Reagan was out on the cam- . the. White House press secrelary,in
paign trail, his traveling press this lask,the president's top two
secretary, Lyn Nofziger, developed deputies, counselor Edwin Meese III
a sixth sense about ·vhen the can· and White House Chief of Staff
didate's chatter with reporters James A. Baker lll, took on the job
. might cause some political the other day.
problems.
Reagan visited an auditorium in
So, when Nofziger found Reagan the Old Executive Office Building
on a hot water course in such con- next door to the.White House where
versations, he placed his bulky body reporters were being given a
between the candidate and the press briefing on the ~dministration 's
and cut off the talk with a couple of economic package.
shout.! of "thank you, fellas."
The president made some short
But Nofziger is no longer the press comments - similar to those he had
secretary, having moved into the been delivering in public for several
Reagan polltical operation. So, other days- and invited questions.
ways of "protecting" the president
But instead of focusing on the
from the inquiring reporters had to economy, reporters chose to ask the
be found.

to Southeast District Team

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992-6655

Account in au reo to$100,000 by FSUC

�Thursday,_March 12,1tl1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Long road to NCAA tourney_.
.
gets underway this evening
.

.

,,

,' .,

,

•'
By Associated Press
The road to Philadelphia begins
tonight when the National Collegiate
Athletic Association's 43rd annual
basketball tournament gets underwa y in such far-flung outposts as
Providence, R.I., and Los Angeles,
with in-between stopS at Dayton,
Ohio, and Austin, Texas.
Four members of The Associated
Press Top Twenty will see firstround action tonight - No.l6
Brigham Young, No.17 Wyoming,
No.J8 Maryland and No.20 Arkansas
- while the other 16, led by top-rated
DePaul, drew opening-round byes
and swing into action over the
weekend .
Tonight's lineup sends BY U (22-6)
against Princeton's Ivy League
kings (18-9) and Georgetown ( 2~11)
against James Madison (2().8) in the
East regional at Providence and
Wyoming's Western Athletic Conference co-champs (23-5) against
Howard (11&gt;-11 ) and Kansas State
(21-8) against West Coast Athletic
Conference winner San Francisco
(24-6) at Los Angeles in the West
regional.
The other half of the 48-team draw
pits Maryland (2().9) against Tennessee-Chattanooga (21-8), the

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KNUCKLES UP- The Unlverslty of Toledo's Harvey Knuckles
(No. 25) goes up for a rebound Ia the first-round game of the Natioaal
IDvttaUonal Tournament between the Rockets and American Unlvel'
slty at Centennial Hall Wednesday nlght. (AP L3serphoto I

•

/ Price learned
·~· Self-promotion
·.
•'

••
••
•
••
•·

.·.

TAMPA, Fla. (AP ) - ancinnati
Reds pitcher Joe Price learned early
that self-promotion can result in
promotion in baseball.
~~You've got to sell yourself,
believe in yourself," said Price,
challenging for a role in the Reds'
starting rotation.
A good job of salesmanship helped
get the 24-year-old Price a trip to the
major leagues last season. He
responded with a 7-3 record that
labeled him as one of the Reds' most
promising young pitchers.
Two years ago, the left-bander
decided to toot his horn a bit after an
impressive season of winter
baseball in Puerto Rico. He finished
with an earned run average below
2.00.
"Pitching down there probably

;:

turned my career aroWld," Price

..•"

•

'":.

•.

....
·..
·:
;:
•
::.

.

: said. "It was my first opportunity to
•:- face big league hitters.
"When I got back here. I sent
-:· copies of my statistics to (Manager
• John) McNamara and Chief Bender
::_: (vice president of player prsonnel ).
The statistics were impressive. I
•;· • hoped to get invited to a big league

.·

:: ~

....::

Southern Conference representative, and Creighton (21-8), winner
of the Missouri Valley Conference
tournament, against St. Joseph's,
Pa., (22-7) of the East Coast Conference in the Mideast regional at
Dayton.
In the Midwest regional at Austin,
Arkansas' regular-season Southwest
Conference champs (22-7) meet
Mercer (17·12) , the Trans-America
Conference tourney survivor, while
Southland Conference titlist Lamar
(24-4) faces Missouri (22-9), the
regular-season Big Eight winner.
The first round continues Friday
night at four other sites. In the East
at Charlotte, N.C., Houston meets
Villanova and Virginia Commonwealth goes against Long
Island. The West shifts to El Paso,
Texas , with Fresno State·
Northeastern and ldah()-Pittsburgh
on the schedule.
Friday's Mideast action will be at
Tuscaloosa, Ala., where Boston
College meets Ball State and
Alabama-Birmingham faces
Western Kentucky. In the Midwest
at Wichita, Kan., Wichita State
plays Southern and Kansas tackles
Mississippi.
Second-round action is scheduled

for Saturday and Sunday with the
regional championships March 1~22
at Atlanta , Salt Lake City,
Bloomington, Ind., and New
Orleans. The final four is March 2830 at the Spectrwn in Philadelphia.
Georgetown Coach John Thompson insists his club is not looking
past James Madison to a possible
meeting with Notre Dame.
" If we lose, it'll have nothing to do
with Notre Dame," he said. " It'll
have to do with James Madison.
We're not foolish enough to look
ahead of this team because if you've
gotten into the tournament, you've
got to be pretty good."
Thompson's Hoyas are · led by
guard Eric "Sleepy" Floyd, a
second-team Ali-Anlerica.
· First-teamer DaMy Ainge leads
BYU a!!Jlinst Princeton's deliberate
attack and tenacious man·t()-man
defense. The Tigers, under Pete
Carril, have been known to knock off
big-time teams who take · them
lightly.
In the West, Wyoming, a team on
the upswing, makes its first NCAA
appearance since 1967. The Cowboys
are seeded fifth in the region while
Howard, led · by S.foot-9 James
Raueff, is 12th and last.
Kansas State is in the tourney for
the 15th time despite a loss to Kansas in the final of the Big Eight postseason tournament. The Wildcats
are led by 6-6 Rolando Blackman.
High-scoring San Francisco had to
win a WCAC playoff with Pepperdine to make the select field.
In the Mideast, St. Joseph's has a
chance to make it to the final four in
its home town but even if the Hawks
beat Creighton, their next opponent
would be DePaul. In the other game,
Maryland 's Albert King-Buck

Pomeroy diamond ·sign-up

,.''
.

'.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

;

\.,

The signup date for those youth
wishing to take·part in the Pomeroy
Youth League's summer baseball
program has been set for this Saturday from 10 a.m . to 2 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Village Hall.
A registration fee of $6 a person
will be required at the time of
sign up.
The Pomeroy Youth League sponsors programs for tee-ball, ages :Hi;
minor league, 7-8 (this is a new
league in which coaches will do the

pitching); peewee, ages ~10 ; little
league, 11-12; pony league, 13-15 ;
girls softball, 9-11.
Anyone with questions about the
program may call Phil Harrison at
992-6248 .

FRIDAY SIGN-UP
Signup for all baseball teams of
Syracuse . Minersville area will be
held Friday from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.
and Saturday from noon unti15 p.m.
at the Syracuse Fire Station. Entry
fee is $6.50.

INC. PROUDLY ANNOUNCES THE

FURNITURE

•

SHOWCASE

Williams gang is a solid favorite!
overTenn~ttanooga.

A year ago, Lamar knocked!
Oregon State out of last year's :
NCAA Tournament. This time, the :
Cardinals are out for revenge again- :
st Missouri, a team they lost to 92-70 :
last December in the Show Me :
Classic.

,.,__ .
thin .. •
"We owe 1~oun some ga...:
sald Mike Olliver, who scored :18
points against the Tigers in that
losing cause.

··COME JOIN IN THE
SAVINGS ON
BEAUTIFUL FURNITURE
DURING OUR

However, quipped Pat Foster,
Lamar's first-year coach, "I'd
rather be playing Mercer."
That task belongs to Arkansas.
Mercer is an unknown quantity, one
of II teams making its first NCAA
appearance.

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ARRIVING
DAIIr..'Y

SOFAS

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Pomeroy

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\

It didn't get him invited to the

Reds. camp but McNamara's interest was aroused and Price was
one of several pitchers called up
from the Indianapolis farm team
when injuries riddled the staff last

season.
The promotion fit Price' career
master plan.
"I feel confident in making the
team," Price said Wednesday. " My
primary goal last year was to be
called up some time during the
season and stick with the Reds. My
goal now is to make the team and
show improvemen't over last year."
Price started a few games least
season, then helped in the bull pen.
Once he got over a initial bout of nervousness, Price became one of the
Reds' most effective and versatile
pitchers. He was 1&gt;-3 with a 2.55 ERA
in his final 16 appearances, half of
them as a starter.
"Obviously, I'd like to be the four·
th or fifth starter this season. I
figure I'm young enough that I can
bounce around for a few years as
long as I keep improving. In the long
run, I'd like to be a starter.' ' he said.

I

. .•

Six Piece Sectional

6

.....~~·"

Traditional
Tufted
Swivel Rocker

A~•'-1
-~·_d everyEach
and
W
year. new

4...

G
6.4.

~

. Georgia's weakness
.. •
•
... IS towenng
center

'; :
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tory.

.·
•

•·
·• •
·' •
·'•
.•
;
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"We knew rebounding was one of
,' · their strong suits," said Fair, who
: ' scored 15 points and pulled down 13
rebounds as Georgia won the battle
• of the boards 47-43. " We came out
:: ready to play."
In other first-round games, Min·
·' · nesota bounced Drake 00-77, South
', · Alabama beat Texas-Arlington 74, 71, Toledo tripped American Univer!;' .; sity 91~ and Texas-El Paso nipped
San Jose State 57~3. The home team
• • was the winner in each case.
L
Tlie first round continues tonight
·•l
with Connecticut at South Florida,
1 • Duquesne at Michigan , North
•I •
1· Caroliria A XT at Duke, Temple at
CII!Jllllon, AlabaiTUI at St. John's,
!. Holy Cross at Southern Mississippi
~ • ai)(J' Rhode Island at Purdue. On
&lt;.

r

'1 •
'.

F

·- ------· - ,.

Tuesday, Dayton edged Fordham 6665 in double overtime.
Wilkins, the Southeastern Cohference's leading scorer with a 23.8
average, led Georgia with 21 points,
and the acrobatic 6-6 forward also
pitched in underneath with 12
rebounds.
Old Dominion'shot only 28 percent
in the first half and never caught up
after trailing 32·20 at intermission.
Leading Monarchs scorer Ronnie
McAdoo scored only two points in
the first half before finishing with a
team-high 18.
While Georgia won with its small
front line, 7-3 Randy Breuer and 1&gt;-10
Gary Hoimes both scored 21 points
as Minnesota, a 198() NIT finalist,
defeated Drake. The Gophers led by
as many as 21 points in the second
half before Drake, led by Lewis
Lloyd's 28 points, cut the lead to
eight before falling back again.
Senior forward Ed Rains scored 26
pOints, including the clinching
basket with one second left, as South
Alabama held off Texas-Arlington in
a game that had 20 lead changes and
11 ties.
Harvey Knuckles scored 29 points
and Mitch Adamek 20 and both had
10 rebounds in Toledo's triumph
over American.
Julius Wayne led defense-minded
Texas-El Paso with 14 points, including six free throws in the final 64
seconds against San Jose State. The
Miners led 31&gt;-26 with 10 minutes left,
but the Spartans cut the margin to
one before Wayne led UTEP down
the stretch.

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TIPPER- Drake forward Lewis Lloyd, left, tips a rebound out ol
the hands ol Minllesota center Jim Breuer In the first half of Wednesday nlght's first round game of the NIT playolls. lAP Laserpholol

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By Assoclaled Press
The Georgia Bulldogs, laden with
heavily recruited schoolboy basketball superstars, know they have one
weakness - the lack of what has
come to be known as .an "aircraft
carrier," the towering center un·
derneath the basket.
The talent of such blue-chip
recruits as Dominique Wilkins, Vern
Fleming and Terry Fair carried
Georgia to 18 victories this season,
but the fact that none of them are
taller than 6-foot-7 is conceded to be
the reason illest II .
So when the Coach Hugh
Durham's Bulldogs met Old
Dominion Wednesday night in the
first round of the National Invitation
Tournament, they stressed rebounding and came away with a 74-00 vic-

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Page--6-The Daily Sentinel

tL~Al
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ollio

Detroit has impressive.win
,,

By The Associated Press
It may not be saying much since
they have won only 18 games all
year, but Coach Scotty Robertson
said the Detroit Pistons' 100-9'1
triumph over the Atlanta Hawks
Wednesday night was "the best one
we played ali season."
Center Kent Benson had eight
points and guard Ron Lee added
seven in a fourth-period flurry that
lifted Detroit to victory. The Pistons
trailed 81-M early in the period
before two baskets by Lee helped
shoot them in frort 88-83. Benson
followed with three baskets and a
free throw before the Hawks closed
within 93-97 but two free throws by
Lee clinched the victory.
Paul Mokeski, Benson's backup,
wound up with 16 points, Benson had
15, John Long 14 and Lee 13. Dan
Roundfield led the Hawks with 22.
In other National Basketball .
Association games, the Boston
Celtics trounced the Milwaukee
Bucks 122-108, the Philadelphia
. 76~rs whipped the New York Knicks

llf&gt;-95, the Houston Rockets triinmed the Golden State Warriors 10&amp;92, the Seattle SuperSonics downed
the Cleveland Cavaliers 101-95 and
the New Jersey Nets defeated the
Washington Bullets 10&amp;-104.
Celtlcs 122, Bucks 108
Larry Bird scored 29 points for
Boston, which pulled away midway
through the third quarter. Boston, ·:.
with the second-best record in the
NBA, and Milwaukee, with the third
best, were tied 15 times before the
Celtics took the lead for good by
closing out the firsthalf with a 16-4
surge fora 6f&gt;.57lead.
Cedric Maxwell and Tiny Archibald added 16 apiece as the
Celtlcs won their 27th consecutive
home game. Bird, who scored 10
points in both the second and fourth
quarters, had 13 rebounds and six
assists. The Bucks were paced by
Sidney Moncrief with 19 points.
76ers 115, Knlclls 95
Julius Erving scored 23 points and
Philadelphia's defense shut down
New Y.ork in thE second half. Ttw.

0-

SuperSonics 101, Cavaliers 95
Fred Brown scored 15 points in the
final 7t minutes and Jack Sikma led
all scorers with 26 as Seattle handed
Cleveland its eighth consecutive setback. The Cavaliers led 7:1-% at the
outset of the fourth quarter and 71&gt;-78
when Brown began his barrage.
B~own conected on his final six
shots, including an lS-foot jumper to
give the Sonics a 93-92 advantage
with I :52 remaining. A basket by
Sikma and two free throws each by
Brown and Wally Walker locked up
the victory. Brown finished with 17
points, as did James Bailey.

Knicks, leading 63-59 at halftime,
managed just 34 points in the second
half as Philadelphia built a H)-point
iead midway through the final
period and coasted horne. It was the
Knick.s' lowest-scoring half of the
season.
Philadelphia center Darr.yl
Dawkins went to the bench early in
the second quarter because of an innamed right ankle and sat out the
rest of the game. But his substitute,
Earl Cureton, scored a three-point
play to start a !(H) surge that put
Philadelphia ahead to stay 7~ with
8:44 to go in the third quarter.
Rockets 109, Warriors 92
Houston's Moses Malone scored a
career-high 51 points. inCluding 14 in
a breakaway third quarter. Tied 5050 at the half, Malone scored 14 points in the third period and sparked
Houston to a 75-67 lead. Rookie Joe
Barry Carron led the losers with 24
points while Houston guard Calvin
Murphy came off the bench to add
23. Malone added 19 rebounds in addition to his point total.

.:

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..

,•.

• J'

FIRST 100 P~OPLE TO VISIT OUR

40% OFF ON ·
·DINING. ROOM SUITES
Solid Maple 46" Bullet and
Hutch, 6 Ladder Back
Chairs. 70x38 Table with
12" Leaf. Formica Top
WAS $2539.95 $
2DAYSONLY
•

·
1523 94

.,

"My mother, Emma, had always
papers that his name was high on the
looked forward to this day," Mize
list of the Veterans Corrunittee.
The job of this corrunittee is to explained. "But she's now in a nur~
review the names and records of out- . sing home after having five
standing players who had failed to operations and both legs amputated
be honored by baseball writers in the above the knee. ·
" Last year she was fine and could
lf&gt;.year specified period five years
have appreciated it. Now she
after quitting the game.
Big John watched the midday recognizes ine and talks a little but
news and kept his ear . tuned to a she doesn't know what this means
telephone ring. Came 12 :30. No from the man in the moon."
Most baseball men think Mize, one
news. No call.
" I told my wife that there was of the game's premier power hitters,
another year gone," he said, "and I should have been in the Hall years
went out to finish stacking lumber. ago.
"The year after I retired in 1953,
I'd already given up when the phone
baseball writers put in the rule that
started ringing."
Tbe " Big Cat" was in. So was a player had to wait five years to be
Rube Foster. Celebrations could considered," the hulking slugger
said. "Then for a while elections
start.
"The first word came from sports were held every other year alterwriters a little before 1 p.m.," Mize nating with the Old Timers Com·
said by telephone from his Georgia mittee.
" That cut down my shots.
home. "The corrunittee was a long
formally notifying me. They had the Honestly, I thought I'd never make
wrong number - a '5' instead of a '6' it. II
Mize's major league career
at the end."
15 seasons, the first six with
covered
It was a bit ironic as well as
the
St.
Louis
Cardinals, four with the
poignant.

New York Giants and five with the
Yankees.
His lifetime batting average was
.312. He hit 359 homers, six times
getting three in one game, four
times three in a row. He played in
five World Series for the Yankees,
poling three home runs in the 1952
Series,

Third, much of that hype is dying
away - or, more accurately, tur·
ning to other . Indians newcomers
like pitcher Bert Blyleven and
several promising prospects.
"The response I got in Cleveland
was unexpected," Charboneau said.
"I wasn't prepared for it, but it
helped me. The more support I got,
the better I was able to adjust to the
majors."
With a year's experience behind
him, Charboneau said he came to
camp with a different attitude and
newgoals.
" The big difference for me this
year is I can work on my

)

THE BIG STRETCH - Mnwaukee Bucks forward Mickey Jobnson, left, makes the big stretch over his back as Boston Celllcs Cedric
Maxwell, right, takes Ia the rebound during first half NBA aelloa Ia
Boston Garden Wednesday. (AP 4•erpboto)

LEBANON RESULTS
LEBANON, Ohio (AP) - Major
Storm captured the $1 ,000 featured
pace mile at Lebanon by a neck
Wednesday night and paid $5.60,
$3.40 and $3.
Sunrise Pebbles was second,
$3.690 and $2.80, and Faith Scamp,
third, $2.60. The 4,4 double of Lone
Mountain and Scout's Star returned

I

I

I

By WW Grlmlley
AP Correapoadent
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - The only his spirit lives every time a black
man ever to pitch consecutive no- man swings a bat or throws a strike.
hitters in the major leagues, Johnny Rube helped open the gates.
Mize waited an agonizing 28 years.
Vander Meer, went virtually unPoor
Rube never got a chance to sel!
noticed as he leaned against the fenJackie
Robinson break the colorline
ce and watched the Cincinnati Reds
with
the
Dodgers.
.
whip through a brisk baseball
not
regard
himVander.Meer
does
workout.
self
as
a
Hall
of
Fame
candidate,
He was no stranger, however, to
although in 1938 he pitched his conan elderly Tamps resident.
"They're picking some forgotten secutive no-hitters against ·the
old-timers for the Hall of Fame over Boston Braves and Brooklyn
at the airport hotel," said the man. Dodgers, a record which many compare to DiMaggio's 5&amp;-game hitting
"What are your chances, Johnny?"
Vander Meer frowned through his streak il\ 1941 and Lou Gehrig's Iron
thick-lensed spectacles and grunted, Man performance of playing in 2,130
"As far as I'm concerned, there'll straight games.
"Actually, I pitched 282-3 hitless
never be a Hall of Fame until Ernie
Lombardi is in it. There's a guy who innings," Vander Merr said. " I pitought to be in there. One of the best ched the last seven innings hitless
all-around catchers who ever lived." ball in a game before the Boston
game and 32-3 after n... hitting
In Lombardi's case, itlooks grim.
The big, lwnbering guy they Brvoklyn.
"My stats (119 victories, 121
called "Schnozz" because he had a
monumental nose, probably will defeats) probably don't qualify me.
But you can't say that about Lomnever make it.
Although he could knock the twine bardi. He was one of the best."
off a baseball, cut down baserunners ...-------------4
with bullets to any base out of a ·
squat position, "Schncrzz" is one of
''
those tragic guys who fickle fame
.......
....
,.........,.
leaves stranded at the post.
MARCH 6 thrtl12
Lady Justice's scales were balan--,.-.ced belatedly in the case of "Big
Cat" Johnny Mize and a pioneer of
the Negro Leagues, Andrew (Rube)
Foster, who were elected by the
Veteran's Committee.
"I'd already g_iven up," confessed
Mize, the slugging first baseman
whose career covered 15 seasons
SCANNERS ·
.t•
with the f'.ardlnals, Giants, and
,. '
Yankees. Foster, a throwback to the
'.
tum of the century, died in 1930, but

,.,

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No foncy slogan

Two Torie Brown
Plaid ; Wood Trim
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MWUmedia, In&lt;'., Pomeroy, Ohio 4570,

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3 Pc. Suite - Brown &amp; Was$1199.95
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1 Year ......... .
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Milstead

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ON
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Rust and Brown
Floral Print

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ON
CARPET
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FAVORITES

Blue and Brown Stripes . .
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Pomeroy, Ohio.

By Carrier or Mo&amp;or Rouk
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One Month ............... . . . . . ..... ~ . «&lt;
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lllMn t lh M&lt;(wiiOUt"• it P~

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1undo, ID IOte l l IO~n&lt;I

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FOR A FREE
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SIMPLISTIC FASHION
always in good tastefrom Vogue

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2 Piece Rust and
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POMEROY, OH.

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Contrasting Welt.

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ARRIVING DAILY.

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Representative, Landing
Msoclates, lUll E:u.clid Ave., Cleveland,

Tonight two games will take place
in the losers bracket with Tuppers
Plains No. 2 meeting Letart at 6
P.M. and Bradbury Kitchen facing
Racine at 7:30. The winners of these
two games will square off Friday
evening to decide who will play
Bradbury Cassell for the championship.

'1260 00

just the truth

Advertising

Pomeroy team.
In the grand finale Bradbury
Cassell won the battle of the undefeated over Racine, 48-41, led by
an outstanding effort by Donnie
Becker who poured in 37 points.
Eason riddled the Racine defense
with great ballhandling and a sizzling night from the floor, pouring in
18 field goals and one free throw .
Tim Cassell added five points and
Jeff Hood four points for the winners. Matt Harris sparked Racine
with 19 points, Matt Jewell12 points,
and Tony Connolly 10 for Racine.

THURSDAY

BEDROOM SUITES

Monday throu,lh Friday, 111 Court Street., by
the Oh.lo Valley Publishini Company •

NAMED TO HALL OF FAME
- Johnny Mlze, above, whose big
bat figured In five World Series,
was named Wednesday to
Baseball's Hall of Fame by the .
Veterans Committee. (AP Laserphoto)

·' ··'

~~ I~e~;~ ·~
::=
·~

A Dh illol of Muldmedia, ID( .

..-------------------------l
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SAVE

fin~st

Member : The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press AAsociation and the American
Newspaper Publishers Association, National

Another exciting evening of grade
school basketball took place last
night at Meigs Junior High School as
Tuppers Plains, Letart, and Bradbury Cassell all claimed victories in
the sixth grade division of the Meigs
County Elementary Tournament.
Tuppers Plains claimed a 3f&gt;.30
win over Harrisonville in the losers
bracket. Jeff Caldwell led the winners with 15 points, Eddie Collins
netted 9, Brian Durst 6,. Brent
Russell 5, and Allen Tripp four points for the winners. Chris Haning ied
the Harrisonville team with 10 poin·
ts, Charlie Barrett 11 points, and
Jessie Howard 7 points.
In another dramatic finish, Letart
edged Pomeroy Tannehill 25-23 led
by T. Gilbride's 12 points and Joey
Roush's seven points. Letart came
from behind after Pomeroy lost the
services of talented Huey Eason in
the first half. Rex Haggy bucketed
nine and Scott Powell 6 for the

i:a ·

SALE STARTS

Solid Pine 54" Buffet and
Hutch, 6 . High Back
Chairs, Decorator Backs,
42x62 Table with 18" Leaf.
Very Sharp. ·
WAS $2100.00
2 DAYS ONLY
,
Pine 60" Bullet and Hutch,
42x66 Trestle Table with
2-12" Leafs, 4 Side and 2
Arm Chairs.
·

lUSPSI.W.I

An exciting night of basketball

Sports World

(')ntH th~

The Uaily Sentinel

I

"' ot.;

"22 HOURS OF FANTASTIC SAVINGS"

PUREBRED DOGS
More than 750,000 purebred dogs
are registered annually in the stud
book of the American Kennel Club.

I

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'1800.00 r'~~~~9b9N9CY s1200.00
SOLID OAK 40" BUFFET
&amp; HUTCH
.
42x60 Table with 2 10"
$2250.00 $1 50.()()
Leafs. 4 Ladder Back 2WAS
1
DAYS ONLY
Chair.

f

The mutuel pool totaled $116,762
and the attendance was 1,089.

weaknesses," he said. 11 Last year, I
didn't want to showcase my
weaknesses, because I wanted to
make the team so badly. This year, I
ca n work on trying to hit the ball to
right field, improving my outfield
play, improving my throwing and
improving my base-running.
"I had a lot of weak areas, but
when you are going for a spot on the
roster, you try and show them what
you do best. I just tried to impress
the coaches with my hitting and
show them that I wanted to play in
the big leagues. Now, I can work on
becoming a better all-around
player."

Today's

12" Leaf.
WAS $2999.95
2DAYSONLY

$98.ro.

Indians' Charboneau is different
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - For all
sorts of reasons, the Joe Charboneau
in this year's Cleveland Indians
training camp is an entirely dif.
ferent fellow than the one who took
Hi Corbett Field by storm last
spring.
.
First, and most obviously, this
player needn't worry about making
the team. Besides winrting the
American League's Rookie of the
Year award in 1980, Charboneau
became the most popular baseballer
in Cleveland in decades.
Second, this player is now used to
the hype .that was heaped upon him
last spring,

Oak 56" Buffet and Hutch,
6 Ladder Back Chairs.
41x42 Pedestal Table with

.-·..

.

.

GIFT. ONE qiFT PER FAMILY.

Nets 109, Bullets 104
Cliff Robinson's 26 points lifted
New Jersey over Washington and
dropped the Bullets two games
behind Chicago in the race for the
last playoff spot in the Eastern Conference. The Nets snapped a sevengame losing streak. Robinson's slam
dunk early in the final period made
the score 82-al and the Nets never
trailed again.

' u;

NEW LOCATION. • • •
241 THIRD AVENUE

NEW STORE WILL RECEIVE A. FREE ·

Mize, Foster finally make Hall of Fame
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - The " Big
Cat" and "01' Rube" made it, but it
\vas a long time coming.
For John (Big Cat) Mize, the
slugging first baseman whose bat
rocked three decades of pitchers, it
was 28 years of waiting and hoping.
For Andrew (Rube) Foster, the
long wait covered more than half a
century, but he wasn't around to appreciate it. The grandpop of the old
~gro leagues died in 1930 at age 51.
·Now both Mize and Foster will be
in baseball's Hall of Fame - chosen
here Wednesday by the Veterans
Cprrunittee - with the inductions to
take place, in Foster's case
· pOsthumously, next summer in the
rriusewn at Cooperstown, N.Y.
Mize, in his home at Demorest,
Ga., had helped carpenters pile up
some lumber and gone into the house
shortly before noon Wednesday to
cat lunch and catch the news on the
radio.
The 6-foot-2, 215-pound bull of a
man had been told an announcement
was expected at noon from Tampa
and he knew from reading the

,.

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WAYSIDE FURNITURE

SAVE

36''X60" TABLE ·
Chrome Legs, 6 chairs in
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RUBBER BACK
LEVEL LOOP
CARPET
OPINING SPICIAL

NEW LOCATION

241 THIRD AVE.

••

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�Thursday. March 12,1911
CARRY.ouT IIIJJ'PER

Discuss fund raisers

CANCER DRIVE - Two youngsters from cerllflcates for their eHoriS. PlciUred, 1-r, are, Kim
Pomeroy Elementary and one from Salisbury raised Calvert and Carolyn Elam, Pomeroy Elementary,
$145.86 for the !lleigs Chapter of the American Cancer · each coUected $51, and Michelle Klein, SaUsbury, who
Soc)ety In the schools "send a mouse to college" coUected $43.86. The youngsters repretleDI students of
program. The youngsters were presented t·shlrls and Meigs Local District. Through the program the society
pw'cluases mice lor cancer research.

'

Several fund raising projects were
discussed at the recent meeting of
the Orange Township Volunteer Fire
Department Ladies Auxiliary.
It was noted that brooms and
knives are still f9r sale and anyone
interested in pw-chasing either
should contact Mrs. Walker at the
Post Office. Members discussed sel'
ving pizza at various functions with
the matter being tabled until a later
date.
Easter eggs will again be made by
the A~liary this year and will be
available in peanut butter and
cherry nut. The eight ounce eggs will
seU for $2 each. The auxiliary will
also make hall ounce chocolate bunnies on a stick for sale starting at 2!i
cents each. Orders may be placed by
calling667-&amp;'i!6 or667~269.
A bid on serving the dinner at the
Olive-Orange Alumni Banquet has
been submitted, it was noted, and if
the bid is accepted then a special
meeting will be held to finalize
plans.
A discussion was held on the high
cost of heating the firehouse and it
was agreed that the facility will not
be rented during December,
January, February and March due
to cost of fuel andother utilities as
weU as the parking problem for fire
trucks.
Cookbooks are being prepared and

local residents a"l ~vited to submit
recipes. Next m~ will be April
13 at the fire house. New members
are welcome. Refreshments were ·
served to the rnarbers and guests
by Mrs. Judy Wet&gt;tr and Mrs. Helen
CaledweU.
PRAYER MEETING SUNDAY
A county-wide prayer meeting will
be held at 2 p.m. Sunday at Chester
Church of the Nazarene with Glen
Bissell as class leader.

con-

chasers to prmde their own
tainers. Proceeds will go to the
Pomeroy Elementary Safety Patrol
for a trip to WuhiJI8tOII, D.C.

~B'P~

~
tc,-

FRIDAY

ONLY

WCKY SAVINGS
WEEKEND REVIVAL
A weekend revival will be held
Friday through Monday evening at
7: 30 each evening at the Mount Olive
Corrununity Chw-ch, Long Bottom.
Speaker will be Charles Bush and
the public is invited.

.

11

Entire Selection Of

SPRING &amp; SUMMER
MEROIMDISE
MOff

---

.--------------1
_..._,_.. _______ ..
Your " Ex rra roucf1 "
Florist Si nce 1957

9t~ II KIDDJE ..SHOPPE
w.
.w -()'

FLORIST

PH. 992·2644

JS2 E . Main, Pomerov
. Your FTD Florist

i

The Daily Sentinei-P•g-9

SA'ltJIIDAY
A "carry-out" 1111PPU will be held
Saturday at the PmlerO)' Elementary School. Vegetable 11011P IIICI
chill will beforsaleaUl.liOwltbpur-

'

i'
-..-..-.-..-.-_...._ _____,

11
2nd Pomeroy,
Friday, Mar. 13 Only

PRESENTED - Through the- geaerooity ol two
Middleport merchanll, the Mei1s Chapter of REACf
has presented the Meigs Community &amp;bool with a
citlzens band radio and anteDD8 to one of the school's
buses. The driver of the bns will be able to use the radio
to seek help In case of breakdoWDS or ·some other
problem. .Ace Hardware Store, Middleport, provided

An Easter bazaar was set for April
3 and 4 with the place to be announced at the recent meeting of the
Willing Workers Missionary Society
of the Syracuse First Church of God.
It was also noted that orders are
being taken for colored eggs and
candies at 992~ or 992-3690. Orders can be picked up at the church
onApril!8.
The secretary and treasurer's
report was given by Mrs. Virginia
Oiler. Jan Jenkins read Psalm 110.
Mrs. Jenkins was acting president
for the group with new officers to be
'elected next month. The Rev.
,George Oiler's birthday party was
discussed and Mrs. Jenkins and Penny Clark served refreshments.

J

TOPS IN EASTERN DISTRICf - The three students In Eastern
Local School District who collected the largest amount of money for
the "send a mouse to college" program, sponsored by the Meigs Chat&gt;'
ter of the American Cancer Society were, 1-r, Terri Lynn While, first
grade student at Riverview Elementary ; Chris Schultz, second grade
student at Tuppers Plains Elementary, and Rickie Lee Causey, kJo..
dergarten student at Tuppers Plains, representing ali of the kindergarten students of Eastern District.

By JOHN BARBOUR
The Aaoodated Preoo
FOURTH OF A SE RI ES

juana on ·an

radla'"ls, tachometer ,
gauges, console.

Lig ht blue with navy
blu e v inyl t op, 5 cy l.

auto., power s teer·
, ing, air .

'6795

262 (10 Engine. padded virw t top, rear
defroster, air .

'3695

GRAN PRIX
Local owner, road
wheels, a ir, silver
with red interi or .

New ti r es, ' long bed,

loca l,

one

owne r .

Gr ay pai nt.

ALL PRICES REDUCED
1978 JEEP CJ·S
1978 CHEVY BLAZER

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E.

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 PROBLEM
in care of this newspaper.

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least relatively hurmless when
compored to other habits.
Thot just is n't true.
In a report to Congress, the
Secretary of Health Educotion and Welfare reported in

:

.,~:

are
we
the
do
use

poses hazards in driving and

other complex behavior ond
definitely interferes with
memorai and intellectual tunc·
tioning while 'high .' As use
comes to involve both
younger and older persons it
tant that we be able to specify
more precisely the kinds and
degre&lt;ls of public health ri sk
which present and onticipoted ,
levels of cannabis (marijuaria)
use pose.''

BANKONE.M

compounds are found when
the plant ma terial is burned .

::: :

What is physicatly impor·
tant is what effect do these
marijuana chemicals have on
the va rious organs of the
body'! How does marijuana af·
feet other bodily functions?
There are known effects on
t he lungs and heart, and sug·
gested effects .on the

:::.

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:;:: :

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BANK ONE OF POMEROY
Pomeroy • Rutland • Tuppers Plains
Membe r FD IC

197700DGERAMCHARGER
1976 CHEVY BLAZER

"----- ~·

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they are Greg Bolen, who was the FF A Creed contestant; Bill Holcomb, the extemporaneous ~peaking
contestant, and Kathy Parker, the prepared speech
·contestant.

Social Calendar

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: ::

Soup supper Saturday

'OIURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE Thur·
sday at 7:30 p.m. at Rock Springs
Grange Hail.
SHADE RNER LODGE 453,
F&amp;AM Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
lodge in Chester. Work in master
mason degree.
PRECEPTOR BETA BETA
Sorority Thursday at 7:45 p.m, in
Riverboat room at Diamond Savings
and Loan.
POMEROY COMMUNITY Lenten
service, 7:30 this evening, Trinity
Church.
FRIDAY
TITLE I Parents AdviSory Council
meeting, 1 p.m. Friday at Rutland
Elementary School to view reading
series which is being considered for
adoption by Meigs County Board of
Education.
RETURN Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the American
Revolution, I p.m. charter day luncheon at Trinity Church. Good
Citizenship girls to be recognized
and presented pins.
SATURDAY
BEDFORD TOWNSillP Trustees
meeting 6 p.m. Saturday at home of
clerk.

The Mason County Regional State
Farm Museum will sponsor a soup
supper Saturday with serving to . :
begin at noon. The price will be 50 ,
cents a bowl, $1.50 a quart. Con- .
tainers are to be provided for carry- ·,
out soup. Hotdogs, ham sandwiches, ·
coffee, soft drinks and ice cream will
alsobeserved. HazeiSmithischair- ·•
man and all proceeds wil go toward
up-grading the fann museum.
MONETARY UNIT
The monetary unit of the African
nation of Liberia is the U. S. Dollar.

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6:
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CB CLUB MEETS
Mr. and Mrs. James Buchannan
hosted a meeting of the Original .
Pomeroy Bend Citizens Band Radio
Club Friday evening. A·dinner was
served preceding the business
meeting. Games were played and a
social hour enjoyed by the group.
Next meeting will be with Mr. and
Mrs. Willard Boyer, Lincoln Hill,
Pomeroy, Aprilll.

GARDEN CLUB MEETS
Plans for trimming and spraying
shrubbery in the civic plantings of
the Middleport Garden Club were
made at a recent meeting held at the
home of Mrs. William Morris. The
club is currently conducting a fundraising project for the work.

L.Uj

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:
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"The PIa ce to Shop for
Work &amp; Western"
Middleport, Oh.
M·S, 9·5; Fri. 9·8

:
'1-

318N.2ndAve.
Phone 992·3684

system and the central ner·
vous system.
All of this indicates the ob·
vious: mBrij uana is a chemical

shotgun and each of its 400
and more compounds is a

separate piece of shot. Its
potential for myriad effects in
the human body is so greot
that researc h at present is
overwhelmed by the possibili·
Across the country, rc.·
search e rs are probing t he

heolth effects of marijuan a on ·
t he lungs. the brain. the im·
mune sys t e m and th e
reproductive organs. Bu t time

is, unfortunately, one of the
factors involved. And while it
might take time to come up
with definitive an~wurs, time
is what today' pot-smoking
teenage rs. some a s young us
11 or 12, cannot offord.
' 'The American marijuuno
e xperie nce has been of bri ef

duration, " the report to Co n·
i~

com ·

parati ve ly rece ntly

that

gress

snys .

" It

man, noted the Chapter had been
presented a plaque from the Heart
Association in apprecl1tion lor
Heart Fund activities.
Joyce Quillen and Patty Pickens
served refreshments.
PARTICIPATES fN EXERCISE
Air Force Master Sgt. James 0 .
Norton, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl H.
Norton of 102 Ebenezer St.,
Pomeroy, has participated in Global
Shield 81, the Strategic Air Command's (SAC) respon~~e to a
slrnulafed attack on the United
Slates.

signirica nt numbe rs of in·
dividunls hnV c hee n u s ing Lhc
more po tent cannabis now

avuilnble on a doily basis. As
our experie nce with tobacco
und ulcohol demonstrates. it
fr eq ue ntly r e qu ires man y
years of use by large numbers

for long range effects of a d ru ~
to become apparent. ..

Tht' m os t obv ious phy s ical
or~ttll !:' involved with marij uunn srnok u art! th e lungs und
bro nch iu I .sy~te m .
'l'l)dn y's rc~ea rd1 un mnri·
j uunn Dml cignre tlc !S mok'crs
find s that s moking lt•Ns lhun

ties .

Spea kmg to a Congressional
committee, Dr. William Poliin,
direc tor of the Nationol In·
stitute on Dn •g Abuse, put it
this way :

" While much remains to be
learned about the heolth im·
pli catio ns o f marijuana, I
would lik e to emphasize thot
our present ev idence clearly
indi ca t es that marijuana

•hould not be · treated os •
harmless substa nce."
Cup}'ri.ch t.

19~1.

'l'he Associated

i•rt~ s!l

NEXT: Th e Blind Lead the

Hli'&gt;1d

,.
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reproduct ive system and hormone produ ction, t he immune

' Bob Hill speaks on life insurance here
POMEROY - A program on life
Insurance wsa presented by Bob Hill
of the Wf!ltem.Southern Life Insurance Co. It a recent meeting r1.
the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Bela
Sigma Phi Sorority held at the Meigs
IM.
Brenda HIU wsa cultural chail'
man for the evening and introduced
the speaker. Kathy Cwnmlngs
presided at the meeting as plans
· were made for the annual Easter
bazaar. Janelle Haptonstall
suggested r. bowling social; the date
was set lor March 22.
Mrs. Sheila Reeves, service chair·

one joint a day decreases vital
capacity - the amount of air
the lungs can expel following
a deep t reath - as much as
smokng 16 cigarettes a doy.
Consider wha~ that means to
the lungs of a teen-ager using
more than one joint a doy,
Chemical analysis of the
marijuana plant shows that it
contains 419 different
chemical compounds and that
6 1 of t hese are specific to the
plant, They are catled the can·
nabinoids. Still more chemical

::;:

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marijuana is harmless or at

More accurately, there
many areas in which
simply do not know
parameters of ri sk. We
know that even acute

Extra Nice . Low, low
miles, viny l top , A/ C,
local owner .

4 WHEEL DRIVES

:

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ing that marijuana is 'silre.'

IMPALA

'1895

il :: ::
::

:

" Despite our increasi ng
knowledge, much remains to ,
be learned about the effects of
chronic use. Unfortunately,
our present limited knowledge
is often interpreted as indicat·

1974 CHEVY

'3595

'4995

'•

1980:

'6795

1977
TRUCK

;:

:=:

with less emotion involved, of

becomee increasingly impor·

1978 PONTIAC

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the valid and invalid
orguments. The trouble is
that the smoke screen still ex·
ists in the mind s of
youngsters who believe that

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

:

:·

individual 's

times incorrect information.
There is now a sorting out,

INFANT SIZES 5Vz TO GENTS 3
12195
95
REG.
SALE PRICE

5 speed tran s., air,

If they are large, they might be cut
to make place mats. Plain ones
could be worked with crewel embroidery and then used to make tops
for pillows. ,.. POLLY
DEAR POLLY - Mrs. C.L.K.
asked how to preserve leftover paint
in cans. A good and easy way is to be
sure the cover Is on good and tight,
and then to tip the can upside down.
The paint will seal the cover. I have
done this for three years and used
leftover paint that has stood for
years. - MRS. R. M.
DEAR POLLY - If you have
trouble keeping the squirrels out of
your bird feeder, you might like to
try my way. Put some hwnan hair in
a pair of old pantyhose and then tie
this around the bird feedk This has

Child'-------------~-------,---t

·;.

heolth.
In the 1960s , in efforts to
dissuade youngsters and
others from using marijuana;
one of the tactics was to scare
people away from the drug.
Those scare tactics mobilized
o lot of incomplete and some-

BOYS' WESTERN BOOTS

1978 FORD
PINTO

:

There 's been a lot of smoke
clouding the effects of mori·

FOR THE COWBOY
IN YOUR LfFEI

1980 vw
PICKUP TRUCK

kept the squirrels away from my
feeder, and I have lots of beautiful
birds to watch. - AMY
DEAR POLLY - When our
daughter first went to college, it was
quite far from our home, so we tried
to do things that would keep her
from being hOmesick. We got her a
sucscription to the hometown paper,
so she kept up with tbe local news.
We had her take along a local
telephone book and a list of birthdays she would want to remember
were written in her address book,
along with a roll of stamps.
When I am working around the
house, I jot down things I want to tell
her or sometimes just funny little
jokes or little happenings. Then,
when I write a letter I do not forget
the things I want to tell her that she
would enjoy hearing. - MRS. J . G.

Here's smoke in your eye

during the observance.
Classroom doors were decorated
with book replicas and students
engaged in numerous projects including making puppets, dioramas
and posters about books they had
read. A poster contest was held to
illustrate the week's slogan, " Get
1Jlead, Amerka - Read" submitted
by Joe Hall , a fafthgrader.

1980 MERCURY
COUGAR XR·7

By PoUy Cramer
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY -I do home some
of the readers have some
suggestions for
ways to use those
cloth napkins that
are lnciuded in
many . tablecloth
sets.
My Pet Peeve is
with guests who
leave used tissues
t ·
on the table when
they leave.- J .M.S.
Cramer
DEAR J.M.S. - I am sure some of
the readers will have some unusual
ideas for using those extra napkins.
Why ·not .sew enough together to
make a patchwork-type tablecloth?

!--.,....---Marijuana and Your

Classrooms observe 4Right-To-Read'

'19

COMPETED- These three Meigs FFA members
competed In the District 17 FFA Public Spe&amp;kmg Contest held recently at Wellston High School. Left to right

Easter bazaar Polly's Pointers
planned
Use for cloth napkins

I

, Sustained silent reading for 15
minutes daily was held at the
Pomeroy Elementary School as
students and teachers observed the
Right-t~rRead Week.
A movie, "Rabbit Hill", based on
.the Newberry Award Book by
Robert Lawson was shown at an
assembly as a part of the program
and follow-up activities were held

the radio and Ingels Furniture Store, Middleport,
provided the anleDD8. This was the only bus of the
school not equipped with a radio. Shown at the presen- .
·tallon are, I to r, Neal White and Guy Hysell of the
Meigs REACT, Juanita Lambert, driver of !he bus, and
Chris Layh, administrator of the community school.
Installation was by Bill Carr.

We're Proud ·
Of Our Record
Our staff nf registered phar·
macists work hard tO · merit a
reputation for d ependable and
accurate serv1ce. Rely on them!

COOL RAY

SUN GLASSES 5Q%OFF·
VILLAGE PHARMACY
PH. 992-6669
it 2ND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Garden clubs meet
Chester Gardeners:-------A demonstration entitled "Contain
It" by Mrs. Janet Bolin, an accredited judge of the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs,
highlighted the anniversary meeting
of the Chester Garden Club held
recently at the Chester United
Methodist Church.
Twenty guests representing
various clubs of the county were
present for the open meeting with
roll call being a favorite garden club
event. Mrs. Bolin, introduced by
Mrs. Janet Koblentz, showed
various types of containers, both the
She
usual and the unusual.
described cont;Jiners as being either
masculine, large, bold types, or
feminine, small, ornate, frilly types.
In preparing an arrangement for
the home, she said that arrangers
should go with what they like and
where they plan to use it. Class,
background, bases, and accessories
go into the selection of a container to
be used in a flower show.

0

Middleport Gardeners
Diana Pullins

Receives honors from
Camp 10900MWA here
Diana Lynn Pullins, an Ohio
· University graduate who received a
four year Modern Woodrnen of
· American scholarship, was honored
by Camp 10900 MW A at a party held
: recently in the Senior Citizens hall at
Coolville.
Miss Pullins, who received a
bachelor of science in education
degree with a major in computer
: science, was praised for her com. munity service to youth groups in
· church, school and the Ohio Univer: sity Upward Bound 'Program. She is
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar
Pullins, Sifver Ridge, Reedsville.
Using slides and momentos she en: tertained the group by describing
her 10 weeks of study in Tours, Fran-

ce, where she completed her
language study requirement. At the
conclusion of her present;Jtion she
treated
members
to supplied
French Pastry
made from
a recipe
by her
host family m France. She was
presented a gift from the group.
Contest winners during the
evening's activities were Brian and
Chris Layh, Pomeroy ; John Hawk,
Alfred; Lena Belle Pullins, Reedsville; Valerie Dunfee, Parkersburg, W.Va.; Betty Dunfee, Little
Hocking; Dan and Kathy Thomas,
Middleport; Cherry Wright and Ron
Workman, Coolville.
Miss Pullins is a member of Camp
10900, Alfred.

·Concert slated tonight
The music department of Eastern
. High School will present not only the
Eastern High School Band but also
. the Trimble High School, Glouster,
in a winter concert at 7: 30 this
evening at the Eastern audltoriwn.
The Eastern Band directed by
James L. Willteim, Jr., will present
"Renegade Concert March", "Send
in the Clowns" and "Overture for a
Festival."
The Trimble Band will play

" Military Escort", "Die Meistersinger" and " Soft Touch-Longer,
Shadows in the Moonlight" . Direc.
ting will be John Gregory.
The two bands will then combine
to present " Discology", "Sunderland Overture', " Novena, Rhapsody for Band" and "Fame" from
the movie of the same title.
Both hands will be taking part in
district band competition in
Gallipolis on Saturday.

A program on the cultivation and
use of herbs was presented by Mrs.
Louise Thompson at the recent
meeting of the Middleport Garden
Club. held at the home of Mrs.
Dorothy Morris.
Using material from an article on
Paul Strausll, Mrs. Thompson noted
that Meigs County is an area particularly well suited for the
cultivation of herbs.
Members responded to roll call by
naming their favorite tree. · The

When choosing a container Mrs.
Bolin listed five things to be con·
sidered - scale, design, color, lex·
lure, and the spirit of the
arrangement.
She made five
arrangements using various types of
containers ranging from the very
modern to · the more traditional
types.
Mrs. Pearl Mora gave devotions
using a reading "The Gospel According. to Me", with reflections on
Ash Wednesday and Lent. Mrs.
Rosemary Young presented Mrs .
Mora who had the snips of wisdom
on hyacinths noting that it is a flower
with much mythology, poisonous,
and had information on growing in
most every garden magazine.
Door prizes went to Mrs. Edith
Williamson, Mrs. Carol Erwin, Mrs.
Eileen Buck and Mrs. Suzy Carpenter.
Hoste~s were Mrs .
Koblentz, Mrs. Marvin Taylor, 'Mrs .
Roy Holler, and Mrs. Homer Holter.

.

8 :!&gt;0

~dglng .

I'

RELA)( •• t

ARE- YOU
CII:AZYf YOU

MIGHTA 8URNEV

DOWN THE

BADLY L.Ot.IG
JOHN NEEVEV

CAI!IIki!

District 13, Daughters of America,
will practice Sunday at I :30 p.m. at

~ I~I~... IT U5€D 1t&gt;

~o---

ee, •J1.&gt;'5r A Mlf.lure.•

r:30

FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE TRl STATE ARL!A

MASON FURNITURE
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday &amp; Saturday
8:30 to 5 : 00 . Thursday till12 noon

I.

I
7:5B
8:!&gt;0

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
HERMAN GRATE

773-5592

'.-lason, W.Va.

ANNIE
~ AIID

lltERE'S
HE
DOESN'T KHOI'I I\SOUT MflliCINE!

; stl!!tHi - AH'
AFTER All THAT~

Y' HAVE T' I'IORK
UHDffl TH' IROH
FIST 0' Dfl. UXIR! ~~ ADMII~I5Ti

HOW HE KEEPS UP I'IITH rr ALL
1 CAN'T IMA61HE •• ftf JUST DOESH'T
SEEM TO KHOI'I

NOI'I~I'IHERE

I'IA6

1-=:..:...:~ ...:.-~ HE SITTIIf~ '? ·-

ALLEYOOP
OIICE THE SURFP.CE CHANGES HAD CEASED ~D THINGS

IN ONE WE FOUND A SEALED VAUL-T CON 8:30

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199.~~~

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Yi aymg contrnuous music at partres

TAINING \'OUR PAPERS AND WRITINGS.'

8:58

Receiver Cut 44%r

reou ~so gellhe facilities lo permll ·
cor 'ng Wllh two Iape decks
Hurry' #31 ·2087
·

.....

GASOlJNE ALLEY

I'd rather
The4 don't keep it warm
she wasn't
enouqh! She rna4 have
disturbed riqht kicked off her covers!
now, Li!r

No one is in the

bedroom
siHinq
with

~

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THE SETTER . IT'S 601NG

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IN6 A WOMAN 1 MAY
6TILL 13E MARRIED

~""' Jl@~....__

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A TOUGH OC HEN

m MOVIE -(DRAMA) ••
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.
12:30

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HE SEES HER ...

_________

12:58
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31· 2087140· 202$!42·2973

•

e."'!rty . (60 mins.)
10:28 LlJ CBN UPDATE NEWS
10:30 (J) NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
(fi) NEWS
10:58 (I) CBN UPDATE NEWS

11:oo

l.lOi 6EiiiN6 UP
B!:FOR'E TEN.

(]

Now arrange the clrded letters to
form the surprise anawar, as sug-

gested by lhe above cartoon.

mwer. K11 I JTHE KI I I X )
(Answers tomorrow)

Yesterday's

I

Jumbles : GOUGE

ANNOY PROFIT FALLOW

Answer : The unsuccessful playwright entered the .
marathon so that he could at last achieve

lhls- A LONG RUN

Jumble ISook No. 16, c::ontalnlng 110 puain.ls 1'41111bM tor $1 .75 ploetplkt
from Jumble, clo thla newspaper, Box 34, Norwood. N.J. 07&amp;48. tnctudl yow
name, lddi'HI, dp eodt and make check• ~yabte to Newspaperbooii;L

BRIDGE
Dummy reversal nails slam
NORTH

3-11-81

t6 2

down."

.K9 8 4
t AQ 10
+Ks 4 2
WEST

EAST

tJ97 3

+104

•s

best guard against as many
bad breaks as possible. I'll be
awfully embarrassed if I go
The student who was dummy got up, walked to where
he could see the professor's
hand, took a quick look at the
West hand also and thou~ht
thal with spades not breakmg
and all finesses wrong, the '
Prof might well be embarrassed.
The student gave a start
when the Prof led the diamond ten from dummy at ·
trick two and ruffed it with
the ace of trumps. The queen
and jack of trumps were
played next with dummy's
king overtaking the jack. Now
the Prof rulled dummy's
queen of diamonds: entered
dummy with the king of clubs:
led dummy's nine of trumps
lo pick up lhe last adverse
trump and went after spades.
He ruffed out West's jack with
dummy's last trump and
made the last two tricks with
the ace of clubs and his fifth
spade.
The Professor had used a
dummy reversal to be able to
bring in six trump !ricks
inslead of the mere live !hat
were there if he had drawn
trumps to start the proceedings.
"

forHeroea" 1962
• 762
3
CIJ(J})ID MORK ANOMtNDY Mindy
• 9875
tKJI32
is conv inced that she haa un+Q 106
+713
leashed a singles monster on
SOUTH
Boulder after she persuades Mork
tAKQ85
that It would improve their relation• A QJ 10
ship il each began meeting new
t6'
e.!Ople.
+AH
0 I]) (liD
THE WALTONS
Corabeththinks herestranijJed sis·
Vulnerable: Both
ter Orma Lee is going to take their
Dealer: North
dying aunt's cove ted pearls and
leaves Walton 's Mountain to stop
West
North East
South
her. ~60 mins.)
Pass
(I) (fi) PAPER CHASE 'Clreal Ex·
Pass
2 NT
Pass
pectations' A student Is charged
Pass
4•
Pass
4 NT
with a crime he did not commit that"
Pass
5t
Pass
5NT
coul d end his law cereer . The
Pass
s•
Pass
Pass
inexperienced James T . Hart
Pass
serves as his counse l in a hearing
with Proleasor Kingsfield .
(J) SOUND OF TRUMPETS
Opening lead:t9
(Jl(i})IDBOSOMBUDOIESHenr; ,
!ired of being thought of as a girl 's
best friend, tries to cre ate a auper
ma cho
image
lor
himself .
By O~wald Jacoby
(Repeat)
and Alan Sonlag
(I) CBNUPOATENEWS
(]) U CD THURSD~Y NIGHT !'&lt;T
The Professor look ed over
THE MOVIES 'The Million Dollar
dummy and r e mark e d ,
Face· 1981 Stars : Tony Curtis ,
"There a re so many ways to
Polly Bergen.
make this contract that I had (NE WSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.,
(I) 7!&gt;0CLUB
CIJ rnJ ID BARNEY MILLER
Ill ())®) MAGNUM, P.l. Magnum
finds his Investigative bag of tricks
sorely needs replenishing when he
agrees to lind a man who dropped
out of sight ten years ago. (BO
mins .)
(1) MOVIE ·(DRAMA) •••• "Deer
Hunter" 1978
(J]) SNEAK PREVIEWS Among the
lor THOMAS JOSEPH
lilms Gene Siskeland Roger Ebert
review are 'Tribute· starring Jack
ACROSS
38 Late actor,
Lemmon and ' American Pop' ,.an
I
Roman
Andy animated musical.
statesman at Evil grin
(j)(fi) ID TAXI
CID GIZMO This epecial salutes the
5 Gather
40 Fortification
Inventors ot the oddball gadg~~t•
10 Popular
41 Partner
mankind has devised to acCom·
old song
of crafts
plish almost any task, trom human - '
powered IIi g ht t o wi ndlng spaghetti
II Humbert
DOWN
with an electric lork.
Humbert's
I Jewelry term
C!l HBO SPORTS MAGAZINE :
passion
1U80 IN REVIEW An exciting look
2 - acid
at the heroes In 1980's sorts
Yesterday's Answer
13 Acclivity
3 !967 British
headl!nes.
14 German
9 Spire
24 Get well
film
Ciltnl iD 2D-20
1!1 CIJ ilQ)· KNOTS LANDING Sid
art songs
4 Mining find
12 More the
25 Soccer star
and Kar&amp;n's teenage son, Eric, is
Bohemian
27 Indurate
IS
Black
cuckoo
5
Entice
th amen of the ho urwhen he rea cuea
16 Vidal novel 29 Italian city
16 Seed coat
6 Watered
a girl fromdrowning , but he's also In
deep tro uble bece uae his act ol
17 Not gross
fabric
19 Binge
30 Musical
heroism has taken place at a pol

' 'Silent Scream ' ' 1980
11) TBS EVENING NEWS
(fi) OUTER LIMITS
11:28 (I) CBNUPDATENEWS
1 1:30 (]) U Cl) THE TONIGHT SHOW
'The Bast or Carson ' Host: Johnny
Carson. Guosts: George Pepp&amp;rd,
J oeiGrey, Bob Uecker. (Repeet;60

Reaflst~i:~~g~~:i~SM~Ii~?

Magnetic Cartridge

TRC-421 A by Realistic

tCAPNUKI
I 1 I

2+

3.

t!ll"llt1'..

. c'Y(J(j

Answers w1th your c ho1ce of two mes·

Travel Safely
With 2-WaY,
Radio

COUNTRY MUSIC: A FAMILY
AFFAIR Tammy Wynette and
Roger M iller host this lively Jamboreo teatturing country music's moat
famous kinfolk .
(1) BOB NEWHART SHOW
(j) FACE THE MUSIC
Ill (j) (liD CBS NEWS
(I)
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
(fi) LILIAS, YOGA AND YOU
(fi)
ABC NEWS
(I) CBN UPDATE NEWS
(%] 11J PM MAGAZINE
(I) COME TO THE WATER
(1) ALLIN THE FAMILY
CIJrnJ ID FAMILY FEUD
CIJ BACKSTAGEATTHEGRAND
OLEOPRY
lii CII TICTACOOUGH
(I) (fi)
MACNEIL-LEHRER
REPORT
(liD NEWS
(]) U BULLSEYE
(I) ZOLA LEVITT
(1) SANFORD AND SON
CIJ ill l]) JOKER'S WILD
Cil DUCK ROGERS
(l)(fi) DICK CAVEn SHOW
(liD MATCH GAME
1)2J OJ FACE THE MUSIC
(I) CBN UPDATE NEWS
(]) II CD BUCK ROGERS On a
strange satellite; Buck discovers
fierce hall·man , half-goat creatures, and when he fights the
beasts he sees himself becoming
one of them. (f30 mlna .)
(I) MISSIONARIES IN ACTION
C!J MOVIE ·(MYSTERY! •• Yo
"Lady Vanlehae" 1979
(1) MOVIE -(DRAMA! ••• "Holllo

1+

,What a value' Buy now and gel a
e~elver wnh lhe power lo easily
dnve lwo pairs of speakers . Two
~agneiiC phone inputs lei you use
~o lurnlables for making
.
gl ofesslonal_-sounding recordings or

1 lo 7 rings. Counter ind1ca1es number of ·
calls received. Buill-in condenser m1ke .
Ready 10 plug in and use FCC approved
Balleries exira 11143-256

EASY, DOC! STEW
HC CLEI'I ALI'IA'I!;
t!iETS HIS M~l

,_,.

IHURTOFt
t1 I J

m

8 :58
7 :!&gt;0

MASON FURNITURE

MOdel STA-820

seconds each. Adjustable to an swer aher

C!l

NUT WHO

.

SHOP

520 Off! Telephone
Answerer- Never Realistic· 40-Watt •
Miss Another Call Per Channel Stereo

sages and records up lo 30 calls of 25

I K1 J

iJ'l U CZJ NBC NEWS
(J) PAUL AND MONA

ON THE TP.AILi

SETTlEP 00\MII, MIKEL AND I ENTERED lHE I'.REA TO
EXPLORE SOME ANCIENT STRUCTURES THAi HAD EMERGED!

79~~

8 :30

WA* THAT

the Syracuse Elementary School for
a spring rally to be held March 21.
All members of the district are
asked to be present.

Lho.e»v.,.. _ _ _ _

U.S.A.)

ATTACI&lt;EP YOU

WINNER OF TV- Janet Kobleotz, Rt. 3, Pomeroy (right), was
wbmer of a live Inch TV aod AM·FM radio unit given away, oo pllfCbase
oeeessary, by MiddlePort Sewing Center. Shown with Janet ls Marlau
Mttebell, owner aod operator o( the sewing center. Another slmUar prize
will be awarded before the close of the business wblcb wlll be the middle
of April.

MARCH OF
VALUES

Slashed
20o/o

11/HO

GIANT

THAT CRUTCH!

0 OF A TO PRACTICE

(11J OVER EASY Guest: Legendary
bella deer Pel e Seeger. Host:.~ugh
Downs.
· (Ciosed·Captlonec;l;

MORE OR LE!I.!I,,
BUT IF ~1!1 LE&lt;9'5
REALLY &amp;R'OI&lt;I!N ··

11/At.ITEP
TO !lEE- HOW

JU!IT

J

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

N!WS

CII

HE 15 11fALitfc:t
.I'IITH PEOPLE-

Is there a double standard
in telling about affairs

C%J U ClJ iliCII ®Hill m

FRIENDS
ABC NEWS
(I) 3'-2-1 CONTACT Programming
maY be interrupted due to ·

o

1

" .::'~~-~

(I) BACKYARD
(1)
CAROL BURNEn AND

20% to 44% Price Cuts!

DU6FONE • TAD-15 by Radio Shack

rJ

EVENING

,..!a;rr;a~n~gm~e~ntC!f~or~the~~e:;v~e~ru~·n~g~w~as;__iM~rs~.N~a~n~c~y~Ca~le~-=-=~=::==~~~;~~~~~~;;;;~~~~~~~~=====~

Helen Help Us

BY HELEN IIOTI'EL
and that happens often. I've got so I
Special correspondent
can't stand sex with him, so he
DEAR HELEN :
aimost rapes me.
If a man has an affair, his men
Helen, I've tried to figure out a
friends or acquaintances wouldn 'I
way to leave, but I was laid off work,
· think of telling his wife. Even other and I couldn't even dig up a week's
wives who find out keep the secret.
apartment rent, much less buy food.
Maybe the idea is that men should be
I've considered suicide, but then our
excused because they're suscepson would have to st;Jy here and take
tible, or entitled, or something.
the abuse I get every day . But let a woman have an affair,
BRUISED AND ALMOST BROKEN
·and her husband's friends feel dutyP .S. Is there any solution?
bound to tell him. They feel sorry for
DEAR BRUISED:
the poor guy, even if he's a stinker
Call the women's center in your
and she deserves a little happiness.
city. They'll direct you to a shelter
Why? - OBSERVER
for battered women (and their
DEAR OBSERVER:
children), where you'll receive counYou've already answered your seling toward your next step.
llwhy?"
A legally separated wife can
I can only add that many people · demand support from her husband,
haven't outgrown age-old conyou know; and falling that she can
ditioning which produces shock at ;m apply for welfare help until she finds
unfaithful woman ; cynical aca job. You won't live well for a while,
ceptance of a "sampling" man.
but you and your son won't starve.
But let's don't generalize: By no
And it's better than being " bruised
: means can all husbands count on
and broken! " - H
friends to keep their affairs secret.
- H.
Got a problem? An adult subject
for discussion? You can t;Jlk it over
DEAR HELEN:
in her column if you write to Helen
This is for the wife who wishes her Bolte!, care of this newspaper.
husband would have a little affair so
she could be proud someone else
wanted him.
That's easy to say for someone
who is sure her man would never
TOOBSERVEBmntDAY
stray.
John Michael Wheeler, Jr., son of
She should be glad she's got a John Michael Wheeler, West Colwnhusband who loves her, even if he's a bia, and Vicki Branham, Midbit dull. It's better than having him dleport, will observe his second bir"work late" three nights a week thday today with a party at the home
with a friendly neighborhood floozie . of his paternal grandmother, Mrs.
- BITTER
Bertha Wheeler. A Scooby-Doo cake
DEAR HELEN:
will be served with ice cream.
My first big mistake was that I got
pregnant, and the second was I
married the man. I truly love my
beautiful son, but I hate my
CLASS MEETING SUNDAY
marriage.
There will be a county-wide clliss
My husband berates me and · meeting Sunday at 2 p.m. at the
begrudges me every pleasure.
Chester Nazarene Church, Chester.
Because I gave in to him (and only
The Rev. Herbert Grate, pastor, and
him) he accuses me of affairs, and
Glen Bissell will be the leaders. The
has even claimed our boy isn't his.
public is invited.
When he's drunk, he's even wo~

.

prepared by MISS Nellie Zerkle who
used green herbs and the dried herb
seeds.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Morris, Mrs. Dorothy Roller,
and Mrs. Grace French. The table
was covered in green and centered
With an arrangement of green tinted
carnations flanked with green
t;Jpers in milk glass hold~rs made by
Mrs. Roller. Mrs. Mary Skinner
·presided at the coffee service.
Guests were Mrs. Sue Baker and

Television
•
•
VIewmg

ER-6Y THE BY- OUI'\ BOX
OFFICE OPENED AT 8 A.M_..1...
AND BY 8:30 HAD SOLD Ou'
FOR THE RUN OF Ms . TIFFIL!S
EN(3AGEMENT-

"VIolent

Road" 1858
CIJ (j}) OJ
ABC
NEWS
NIGHTLINE
CI CIJ CBSLATEMOVIE 'THEJEF FERSON : The Agreement ' Stars:
lsabei Sanlord . ShermanHemaley.
George suggests that Jenny and
l io nel
sig n
a
prenuptual
agreement, thereby creating turmoil in the families . (Rep.eal)
'McMILLAN AND WIFE: Secreta for
Sa l e' Stara : Rock Hudson , Suaan
Saint · James. Sgt. Enright an·
n ou nc es his retirement from the
depa rtment and hie engagement to
a be~utiful, wealthY young lady .
®J MOVIE · (ADVENTURE) "Yo
" Oper•tlon C.I.A. " 1H5
(j) 1)21 ID CHARLIE'S ANGELS
' NipaAndTucka 'Theangeiainvade
the elegant world of an excluaive
haallh spa where Tiffany jeopar·
d iz es her health bY becoming a
n urae to ft plast ic surgeon under the
guntodoacompletefaclaltranaform et ion on an international crime
!!iU~. (~epeat ; 70 min a.)
'
[j .} U CD TOMORROW COASTTO..COAST Guest : The multi·
tal ented Albert Brooks . (90 mine.)
( :() IIIIOYIE -(DRAMA) • "Maleor"
1V7V
( [) CBN SPORTS REPORT
llJ
ROBERT
SCHULLER
~APTIONEOI

1: 10 CJ)
CAROL
FRIENDS

BURNEn

AND

·'
1D •-'

7 Pothouse
offering
8 Star
of 3 Down

18 Put to
the rack
20 Spire
ornament
21 "She - a
yellow

22 Segment
23 Word after
silver
or gold

group
31 Pitchers
38 Tease
:t7 Old note

ribbon ... "
22WWII

newsman
23 Previous
25 Document
26 Latvian
27 The brave
one
28 Berlin
outcry
29 Cracker
32 Sanskrit
school
:13 Choler
34 Haul
35 Called out
37 " - Kleine
Nachtmusik"
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
lo
J.ONGFELJ.OW
One leller simply otands for another. In this sample A 11
used Cor the three l.. 's, X for 1he two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the lcnglh and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day th(l code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES
DC
PWUU

PDX
HXXA

KCIQHCH
DNSC

Ax F ow A o·

AXFDWAO

FX

KCIQHC. TNKFWNU
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: ITTAKES ALL THE FUN OUT OF A
BRACELET IF YOU HAVE TO BUY ITYOURSELF.- PEGGY
JOYCE

�• Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

~Judge
•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, March 12,1981

_terminates 38 traffic cases

• Twenty-five defendants were fined
• and 13 OChers forfeited bonds in
: Meigs County Court Wednesday.
· Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
. · were Paul Taylor, Nelsonville, Jen·
-nie Williams, Marietta, and Ellis
· ·McMillan, Racine, $21 and costs,
speed; Durojaire Baruwa, Atllens,
$25 and costs, speed; Donald Lam·
bert, Pomeroy, James Roush,
Logan, Joseph Fenderbosch,
Gallipolis, $22 and costs each,
speed; Rex McGiunls, Wilsonburg,
W. Va., Robin Ranson, Independence, and Joseph Donahoe,
Racine, $23 and costs each, speed;
Patrick A. Owens, Pomeroy, $5 and
costs, altered rear bumper height;
Randy Wheeler, Racine, $23 and
costs, speed; Jeffrey Seaver, Hart·
ford, $15 and costs, walking along
highway while intoxicated; Dennis

Richards, Racine, $10 and costs, un·
safe vehicle; Ricky Johnson,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, left of center; Steve Pullins, Pomeroy, Calista
Searls, Middleport, and Reginald
Hart, Wheeling, $27 and costs each,
speed; Teresa Davis, Middleport,
$10 and costs, failure to display valid
registration; Earl Wood, Pomeroy,
$22 and costs, speed; William D.
Baker, Long Bottom, $10 and costs,
improper turn; David Kolbentz,
Pomeroy, $15 and costs, no
operators license; Terrance Finney,
Dexter, $25 and costs, three days
confinement, six months probation,
confinement suspended, no
operators license; Robert Roush,
Syracuse, $50 and costs, reckless
operation ; Harold Clark, Racine, $10
and costs, failure to display valid
registration.

Forleiting bonds were Ronnie Barber, Reedsville, $62.55, no operators
license ; Dwanna Bright, Cheshire,
Michael Hill, Zanesville, Thomas
Bryan, Ashland, Stanley Beat,
Cleveland, Hugh Dalton, St. Albans,
Hazel McKelvey, Portland, Mark
Sells, Lancaster , Margaret

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Nearly
250 service representatives for Ohio
Bell Telephone Co. in Columbus and
Cleveland, who staged a two-day
wildcat strike over job duties, were
expected back at work today.

uwe're obviously pleased/' company . spokesman Tom Lindeman
said Wednesday night " I un·
derstand the union leadership advised them to return to work."
No disciplinary action was planned against the strikers, he said.
About 150 of 238 business and
resident representatives, members
of the Communications Workers of
America, AFirCJO, Local 4310,
failed to report to work Wednesday
morning. Nearly all the company's
101 operators refused to cross picket
lines.
Some 60 service representatives in

MUST CONTACT CLERK
MARRIAGE ENDS
Sutton Township residents
In Meigs County Common
wanting fire protection witl}_the. , Pleas Court the marriage of
RaCine Fire Department must · Larry K. Hill and Josephine Lynn
Hill was dissolved.
contact the village clerk, Mrs.
Mae Cleland, at once. Renewals
for 1981 must be paid iJn.
mediately. Individual contracts
PROBE INCIDENfS
are $20 a year from January,
Michael Ruchti, Addison, in1981, to Dec. 31, 1001. The fire ' formed the Meigs County
department will not answer calls ·sheriff's department Tuesday
unless there is a c&lt;Jntract.
· that between5 p.m. and9 :30 p.m.

HOSPITAL :\EWS
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES MARCH II
Lasetta Alley, Phyllis Baird, Bobbie Bays II, Maurice Blazer,
Dorothy Carter, Donna Craigo,
Dorothy Davis, Paul Davis, Travis
Grate, Beverly Hale, Clifford Hayes,
Tammy Hemsley, Sharon Harold,
Della Hudson, Iva Ingles, William
Israel , Johnny · Jackson, Mrs.
Delmar Larkins and daughter,
Deborah Lee, Brenda Long, Jo Lynn
Martin, Mildren Miller, Thomas
Mills, Sarah Powell, Pearl
Reynolds, Nicholas Rocchi, Henrie!ta Salyers; Clara Shamblin, Rebecca Smith, Ruth Spaun, Linda Tremper, Robert Werner
BffiTIIS
Mr. and Mrs. John Hale, son, Oak
Hill ; Mr. and Mrs. William Zinn ,

the battery and shifting arm was
taken from his vehicle while
parked at the intersection of SR
and 124.
Mildred Well, Rt. 1, Middleport, reported that her
mailbox bad been knocked down
during the night. Both incidents
are under investigation.

EMERGENCY CALLS
The Rutland Emergency Squad
at 3:04a.m. Thursday took Jerry
Slerod of Meigs Mine 2 to
O'Bleness Hospital in Athens. On
Thursday at 8:41i a.m., the
Pomeroy unit took Wilbur Hanning of Bradbury to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

MEETS TUESDAY
The Meigs County Heart
Association will meet at 12 noon
Tuesday at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Luncheon
ap·
pointments should be made by
calling Lois Kelly, !J85..4270.

WORK SESSION
The Meigs County Genelogical
Society will meet Sunday at 2 ·
p.m. at the Meigs Musewn. A
work session is plauned.

SEEK DISSOLUTION
Jane .Lee Ratcliff, Reedsvill~
and George Joseph Ratcliff,
Reedsville, filed for dissolution of
marriage in Meigs County Common Pleas Court.

Cremeans, Rutland, and Robert
Huntsman, Zanesville, $40.50 each,
speed; Wanda Perkins, Huntington,
$35.50, improper passing; Robert
Wise, Cheshire, $60.50, no operators
or chauffers license; Harold smith,
Reedsville, $360.50, OWl.

Service reps return to work

Meigs County happenings

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Frank
Millers,
Rutland; Vickie Morrison,
Pomeroy; Kathryn Felter, Middleport.
Discharged-Orville Hill, Janet
Sigman, Curtis Riffle, Thelma
Johnson, Glen Jewell.

Area deaths

son, Hamden.

Cleveland also were off the job WednesdaY over a similar dispute, about
40 less than the day before.
Business representatives in
Columbus walked llff the job
Tuesday to protest the company's
request that they take sales training
to help promote a new miniature
switchboard for small firms.
Resident representatives failed to
report to work, too, honoring their
colleagues' dispute.
Three voting sessions were .held
Wednesday for all local members in
Columbus- more than 1,600 - with
most casting ballots, said Juanita
Brandon, president of Local 4310.
The voting did not involve strikers in
Cleveland, who opted on their own to
return to work, too.
"All the people involved (in
· Columbus) agreed to go to work and
, resolve the work dispute in a nonnal
· grievance pattern," she said. '
Service representatives and
telephone operators began trickling
back to work late Wednesday af·
temoon following the voting. Super·
visors had been staffing key
positions.
The walkout, according to Ms.
Brandon, never had been authorized
- "absolutely not."
'

Market reports
Uvesa.rk SIIH
Albliny, OIIJo

A~os

Man:-b 7, ltll
CATILE PRICES:
F'eeder Steers : (Good and Choice} 3(X).{,()() lbs.
61·70.50: 500-700 lbs. ~2.
Feeder H~lf~rs (Good and t'110ice ) J00-.500 1~ .
fi0.50-59; 5ro-7001bs. 5L-:i7.
Feeder Bulls (Good and Choice ) 3())..600 lb:J.
50.50-70; 5ro-7001bs. ~1 . 50 .

Slaughter Bulls (Over 1,000 lbs.) t6 .10.SO.
Slaughter Cows: Utilities 41-4S.50; Canner:s

and Cutters34 . ~ . 50 .
Springer Cows: { By the PoWJ41--46.1 0.

Cow and Call Pairs: (By the Unit) lM-495.
Veals : (Choice and Pt'imel71-89.75.
BabyC..Ives {By the Head l 64-79.

HOG PRICES'

IJGgs : (No. l,

:J8.7:HO.

ANCIENT ROME
In ancient Rome, peaches sold for
the equivalent of $4.50 each.

Barrows

11nd Gilts. 21"»--230 lbs.

.

Butcht:r Sows2t-37.25.
Bull'her Boars :12.50-3!1.
Feeder Pigs (By the Head) 11}.26.

SHEEP PRICES :
Feeder Lambs 37-54.

J, P. Miller
Mr. and Mrs. Nonnan Will
received word of the death d J. P.
Miller, fonnerly of Meigs County, at
a hospital in Virginia last week.
Mr. Miller was a minister of Chur·
ches of Christ for many years. He
pastored the churches of Bradford,
Bradbury, Rutland and Dexter in
Meigs County from 1938 to 1941. His
last pastorate was at teh Phillippi
Church of Christ at Deltaville, Va. ,
where he and Mrs. Miller have lived
for about the last 20 years. At the

l

time of his death he was minister
emeritus of that church.
Surviving are his wife, Eleaine; a
son, Don; a daughter, Kathy, and
two grandchildren. Mrs . Miller's address is Box 188, DeltaviUe, Va.

23043.
UGESHIELDS
Lige Shields of SyracU!Ie died Wednesday night at Holzer Medical Center. Arrangemenlll are being com·
pleted at the Ewing Funeral Home
in Pomeroy.

Report no progress
in teacher strikes
By The Aosoclated Press
More than 1,000 striking
Youngstown teachers entered the
15th day of their walkout today,
pledging to keep the system at a
standstill until winning wage hikes.
"The strike goes on with even
more enthusiasm than before," said
Robert Vargo, spokesman for the
Youngstown Education Association. His comments came Wednesday, a
day after 15 strikers and two Ohio
Education Association consultants
were sentenced to jail and fined.
No progress was noted in Ravenna
and Mariemont, meanwhile, where
teachers' strikes continued as
classrooms remained open.
Vargo said OEA officials planned /
to meet today with the school board
to study the district's financial conclition. There will be no talks at that
session, he said.
On Tuesday, Common Pleas
Judge Clyde W. Osborne of
Mahoning County sent four teachers
to jail whom he said acted violently
on picket lines and withhold imposition of sentences for the others.
The four men were released from
jail shortly afterward on appeal to
the Ohio 7th District Court of Appeals.
The YEA said it would appeal the
other sentences, too.
"I think there's a total solidarity
and a great deal of anger," Vargo
said of the sentences. "We didn't
take strike action lightly when we
began, we're not taking it lightly
now."
After talks broke down Jan. 31,

teachers said they would have accepted a wage hike of $660 on their
current $11,000 annual salaries. But
Vargosaidhenowdoubts"6percent
would sway anybody."
The board bas said a fiscal audit
by state officials should prove the
system has no lunda for raises. But
according to the YEA, some. $2
million should be left for pay hikes
duringthenexttwoyears.
Teachers have not yet received a
hearing date for their suit, filed in
federal court, seeking $2 million in
damages against the board for ·
alleged violation of instructors' civil
rights.
Schools for the system's 17,000
pupils have been closed since
Friday.
In Ravenna, OEA consultant Gary
Kassander said representatives of
!57 strikers and the board are
keeping in touch infonnally. But he
said no new talks have been set to
end the walkout, which began Nov.
12.
Instructors are seeking a new
master contract with dismissal and
tenure clauses and a $300 hike on
theiraunual$11,300salaries.
About 46 teachers have been
charged by the Portage County
prosecutor with criminal
misdemeanors in connection witll a
picketing incident last month. The:y
are to be arraigned March 19.
And in Mariemont, some nonstriking teachers blamed the
Mariemont District Education
Association for vandalism as the
walkout entered its 34th day today.

Small investment, large retur":s, Sentinel Want Ads

OhiO
11
wanted to Do
IRON AND BRASS BEDS · : Furnace repairs, electrical ,
Old furniture, desks, gold work, plumbing, mobile !
rings, jewelry, sliver home or residence. 992· :
dot!&lt;lrs, sterllng, etc. WOOd 5858.
·
ice boxes, Jars, antiques,
etc. complete households. Wl!l do babysitting seven
Write: M.D. Miller, Rl. 4,
Pomeroy, OH -45769. Or days a week, days or
evenings If necessary,
call 991·7760.
Ages from newborn to 12
years old. My address Is
Old or historical Items 106 1-2 Brick Street,
. from Me los Co . Par· • Pomeroy, Ohio 45169 .
tlcularly Pomeroy. Signed Phone number Is 992·3587
stoneware, bottles, ad· ask for Debbie . You can
verllslng, photographs, call anytime. I will be
tokens,
documents, taking care of the children
souvenir pieces, postcards, In my own home. 1've have
etc. I' m a collector, not a a babysltters course, and
dealer. Call Bob Roberts used to be a nurses a Ide
after 5 p.m. 992·2591 .
and have had e'Kperlence
babysitting. I am 2~ years
old. I love to take care of
N~w, used, and antique fur·
niture. No Item to larg~ or kids. They Will be well
to small. Will buy one piece taken care of.
or complete households.
Martin's General Store at
992·6370.
1

!1

Help wanted
GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tinel route carrier; Phone
us right away and get on
the eliglbillty list at 992·
2156 or 992·2157 .

Public Notice

NOTICE OF SALE
the 13th day of Apr il, 1981.
Offers will be received at the Mayor' s office, 237
until 4:00 O' Clock P.M. on Race Street, for the sale ot
...... -~----~-------...-.---:
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Curb Inflation•
Pay Cash for
Classifieds and
Savell I

I

Write your own ad and order by mai l with tnis
coupon . Cancel your ad by phone wt1 en you get
results . Money not refundable .

'I
·I

Name----------

I

-I

Public Notice

following described
real estate, to·w it :
Rea l estate situated at
the corner of Garfield anc'
South Third Avenue in tht

Deed Records.
Sale of said rea l estate
was authodzed by Or·
dinance adopted January
12. 1981 . The vi II age
reserves the right to re ject
anv and all bids. The sale- is
pursuant to Section 721.03
of the Ohio Revised Code .
(2) 26, (3 ) 5, 12. 19, 26

the

Vi llage of Middleport,
Ohio . The Village acQuired
title to said real estate by
deed recorded in Volume
270, page 703, Meigs County

I

Wanted
For Sale
Announcemenf
For Rent

,'I
;f

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eANNOUNCEMENTS

;I
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·1
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U - Mobllt Homr~
tor ll•nt
u - Ap•rtmtnt tor II tnt
•S- F Room•
••- Sp•ce lor Rent
41- Wantr-cl to Rrnt
•1- Eqv lpment for R\ nt

Card of Thanks

eMERCHANDISE
51 UUSfUn -

SIW•tiiCI W1nttd
lnsurancl
Bv,inlll Tr.Jinlnt
Schooh Instruction
ItR•cllo, TV
&amp; ce Atptlr
11- Wantr-cl To Do

These cash rates
inc lude discount

18.
29 .
30.
31.
32 .
33.
34.
35.

; 1 15.

·1 16.
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Mail This Coupon with Remittance
1

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eRENTALS
·1 - HOUUS

12ll1•I S-

11 .

6.
7.
B.
9.
10.
l.I .
!1.
13.
14. - - - - - - -

Cucl of Ttl.tnks
In Mlmor••m
Announnmenll
Gnoe.Jw•r
H•ppy A~ I
Lost •nd ll=ound
Yilrd S.lt
Pubhc S.lr

eEMPLOYMcNT
SERVICES
1!_ Help w1 nttd

'13.
14.
15.
16.

I.

The Daily Sentinel

RACINE GUN SHOOT, more information call m Racine Gun Club, every 3941 or 669 ·4535
Friday · nighr starting ar
7:30 p.m. Factory choke
4.__ __!G!!IC!!v!e•!w~a.r.__ _
guns on 1y .
YOUR
valuable
tuning &amp;
Daniels,
2082.

&amp; AUCIIOM

12 .

1·
3·
4·

1ll4i•71-

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eSERVICES
11 - Home I mprovtmlnh
12 - Pit~mbing &amp; E•uvlllnt
ll- E,uv•t•nt
14- Eitclrlul
&amp; Rtlr!t•r•tlon
IS- Gtnlrtl H•ullnt
1•-M. H. RtJ•Ir
17- UphOIIttrr

1f Worcl1 or Uncltr
1 dl)'
1 cl•n
J cl•n
• cl•ys

curt
1.00

Ch.trt•
l.lJ

I.H

l .tCI

2.00

1.21
J .JJ

l .oq

CHRISSI POWELL

We wish to express our
sincere appreciation to
all of you who prayed
for us during this time of
grief. Thank you : for
showing to us your love
and concern.
In Memoriam

&amp; ACCUJOrltl
71- AUIO ReD•Ir

Rates and Other lnformatjon

I

1

tor hie
71- V•ns• 4 W.O.
74- Moltf(YCiei
H,Auto P•rts
7! - AUIOs

Want· Ad Advertising
Deldlines

1I

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Box 729
I
:'I, _______________________
JI
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

eTRANSPORTATION

eREAL ESTATE

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U - LIYIIIOCII

••- H•r 1 Gr.tin
U - Sttd &amp; Ftrlilurr

JI - Homts for S.ltl
12- MoiJiii ·HOmtl
lorhle
ll- F•rms for Sl it
14- lusintu lui/dints
JS- L.otsl Acrutr
36- lh•l EU•tr W•ntecl
l7- Re•lton

FROM THE
FAMILY:

•t - F•r'" Equipmrnl
U - Wantf'CI to Buy
72- Truch lor S•le

u8\lllnru
Opportun1ly
H - Mone'f to L,un
13 - Profelllon•l
Strlllcrs

2; JO P .M. D•dy
12 Noon hlvrci'V
for MoniMiy

HovSthold Good!
CI . T\1 , Rtdlo Elylpment
Anhquu
Misc . Mrrcl'land•sr
Bulld lnt Suppl ies
Petslor S11e

eFARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

eFINANCIAL

Announcements
Announcements
3
I PAY highest prices Tired of penny pinching??
possible for gold and silver Housewives and mothers.
coins, rings, jewelry, etc. change spare time Into SSSS
Contact Ed Burkett Barber Fle)(ible hours, e)(cellent
Shop, Middlepor.f.
earnings, free wardrobe .
3

Two evenings a week. For

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

9- Wanted to Buy

!7.
lB .
19.
10.
11.

70/X) ....

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
I 11 Court St., Pomeroy, 0., 45769

l Phone'---~==;:;:;::::::
.:. I1

:I

7HE. a.-li. WHO
HA-5: NOTHING

PHONE 992-2156

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ol''EV£~ NOTICE?

WANT AD INFORMATION

I1 Address. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Print one word in each
space below . Each in·
itial or· group of figures
counts as a word·. Count
: I name and address or
. I phone
number if used .
: I You ' ll get better results
. I if you describe ,}ully,
: I giv e price. The Sentinel
reserves the right to
~ I classify , edit or refect
; I any ad . Your ad wil l be
: I put In the proper
. I clasifi catlon if you ' ll
check the proper bpx
below

They'll Do It Every Time

Public Notice

t:•c,. wotct ovtr !tit minimum 1S ..... ords 11 • ctntt oer word,., cl•y .
Ach running othtr ttl•n conttcutlvtlllyl will bt c,.,lrttcl•l ,,.,, I d•y

,.,..

In m•morv. Card of . " •nk~ 1ncl Dbltv1ry 'unt1 per word, U .GO
minimum . C••'- In •clv.tnct .
Mobile Hom• u1e1 •nd Y., rd ••'•• .,e ICctgltd c&lt;1l y wllhctt'- wltl'l
or•er. 25 etnl ch•rte fgr ilcls c•rrr lnt IOJ Numb~ In C•r• of Tl'lt
Srntinel .

In loving memory of our
Father and Grandfather ,
Ciifford J . Decker, who
passed away 7 years ago
today, March 12. 1974.
t~~~ns~ing of the thoughtful
That you have sa id a.nd
done.
And lov ing you a little
more.
Dear Dad, for each and
every one .
We think of our Dad as a
down to earth guy,
Just plain like the sea, the
wind, a.nd fhe sky .
We think and we know he
has gone from our side,
But we th ink of our Dad
with the utmost of pride.
Sadly missed by h ts
daughtell , Betty J . Hayes
and family.

Classified Ads
brln&amp; rou
utra cash

PIANO . Too
to neglect, expert
and repair . Lane
742·2951 or 992·

1 yellow female kitten, •
months old, also yellow cat
&amp; one female alrdale dog.
See Ray Garlinger one
house on the right past the
Church on Little Kyger Rd.
Co. Rd. 20 In Cheshire.

Racine Volunteer Fire
Department sponsors a ·Free puppies. Mother, Brit·
shot gun &amp; rifle match tany Spaniel. Four weeks
every Sat. night 6:30 p.m. old . 667·3126.
at their building In Bashan .
Factory choke 12 guage
Lost and Found
shot guns only . Open sights 6
22 rifle .
LOST : Family pet. Large
male black &amp; while cat. An·
MEIGS MUSEUM open by swers fo Bandit . Mid·
appointment January· Mar · dteport, 6th St . area . 991·
ch . 991·1164, 992·2802, 992 · 2531. Reward.
2360 or 992·2639. Histories
for sale
Pomerov ·
8
Public Sale
In memory of Thelma E. Middleport Libraries . .
&amp; Auction
Thompson .
We do not forget her, we LOCKSMITH
Serv ice, AUCTION · Large farm
love her too dearly,
Master Keying, Com· equipment auction, sat .,
. For her memory to fade binations, Bonded . Call : March 21st. at Siders
from our lives like a New Hav~n. W. Va . (304) Equ ipment Co., on U.S .
dream ;
882·1079.
Henderson,
Hwy . JS,
Our 1ips need not speak
W.VA ., call for details. 675·
when our hearts mourn sin· Decorated cakes for all oc · 3440. Sat . March 21st. 10
cerely ,
cassions . Character cakes,. a .m .
For griet otter') dwells sheet
cakes, and . wedding
where it seldQm is seen .
. Call 992-6341 or 992· 9
Wanted to Bu
Sadly missed by husband, cakes
Rex, son, Ronnie, and 2583 .
WANTED TO BUY :
daughter. Re becca Lynn .
SILVER,
Helen' s Beauty Shop Is GOLD ,
PLATINUM,
STERLING·
proud to announce that
RINGS,JEWELR ·
Gwen Folmer has joined COINS,
4
Giveawa
the staff. Please call 992· Y, MISC. ITEMS . AB ·
SOLUTE
MARKeT
Give away to good home. 2890 for appoi_ntment.
PRICE GUARANTED. ED
Cute cuddly puppies .
BURKETT
BARBER
Father is a border colli e, Tl CKETS to Memorial Golf SHOP. MIDDLEPORT,
mother is medium sized Tournament, May 18·24 . OHIO 991·3476.
dog. 991·7574 after 5 p.m.
Cal!992 ·5574 after 6 p.m.

t-~---=======-.L=========-~OLD
ches,

. WANTED : 3 people to sell
Avon. Call 742·2354 or 742·
2755.
FRIENDLY HOME Toy
Part ies now In our 26th
year . Is expanding and has
openings for managers &amp;
dealers.' !'arty Plan e)(·
perlence helpful. Guaran·
teed toys and gills. No cash
investment, no collecting,
deliYering. Car &amp; phone
necessary. Call collect,
Carol Day . 518 ·489·8395.
Babysitter wanted in my
home . 7:30a .m .·6 p.m. Call
after 6 : 30, 992 ·6233.
Some part time jobs In
Pleasant come wlfh a r
$1,.500. bonus! Plus free
college tuition! If you are
age 17 or older, a junior or
senior In hiQh school, or a
nigh
school
diploma
graduate, you may qualify.
The West Virginia NaUonal
Guard Is no ordinary part
time iob! GOOd pay, gOOd
benefits! For details call
SFC O'Neai675·39SO.

8

Public Sate

&amp; Auc1ion

PUBLIC AUCTION
SAJ,, MARCH 14 1981
1

10: 30 A.M •
Located on State Route 124 between
Reedville and Hockingport, Ohio on Eden
Ridge at the P. R. Randolph Property.
There was cylinder phonograph records
advertised that is not there. See complete
listing in last Sunday's paper.
·

Dan Smith
949-2033

AUCTIONEERS
Jim Carnahan
949·2708

7~2 · 2288 .

Will do wallpapering. 992·
3760.
Have vacancy for elderly .
Room and board, laundry,
Reasonable. 992·6022.
Repair or remodeling
work . Floors, doors, wa11
paneling, ceiling tile,
siding and painting . 992 ·
2759.

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE bean can ·
celled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone
992·2143.

eHeat Pumps
• Electric Heating
&amp; Wiring
Industrial , Commercial
and Residential
1-11 Hone Power Riding

'!.l1~_.!:.H,_,o'"m"'e"s'-'t"'o,_r.._sa,_l,ec.___

Rose Hill, attractive six
room house with a
detached
garage,
workshop, full basement.
. 1.12 acr.es. $52,500. 1-614·
678 ~ 2513 .

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 6S,
three bedjooms, new car·
pet. 1971 cameron, 14 x 64,
two bedrooms, new carpet.
1972 Champion, 11 x 60, two
bedrooms, new carpet. 1976
Cameron, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, all electric. "1971
Skyline, 12sx 6), two
bedrooms, bath &amp; v, , new
carpel . 1970 PMC,
12 'K 60, two bedrooms, new
carpet. B x S Sales, Inc.,
2nd x Viand Street, Point
Pleasant, wv Phone 675·
4424.
1969 PMC 3 bedroom
trailer. 12x60. 992·3954.

VIRGIL B. SR.w
216 E. Second Street
Phone
H 614 l ·922-3325
WELL PLANNED - 8
rm .' frame home. 1620
sq. 11. and large lot
1.Ux220, has 2 tub baths,
nat. gas furnace with at·
!ached wood burner, full
basement and ~ car
garage on StateR!. near
stores and schools.
NEW LISTING 7
acres In
Rutland
Township. Has old gas
well, Leading Ck. water
and a smal house tor on·
ly Sll,SOO.
NEW LISTING - 21
acres in Olive Twnshp .
on good State Rt. Lots of
locust and minerals
leased. Asking S15,000.
LOOKS NEW - and just
right tor a family . Chain
link fence, aluminum
siding, 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, nat. oas furnace,
drilled well, T.P. water
available . Nice and neat
large yard. Only SJI,OOO.
IDEAL FOR YOU - In
gOOd repair older home
with corpe1lno, nat. gas
furnace, 3 bedrooms.,
storm drs. and windows,
garage and all city
utilities. Out of flOOd .
$27,500.
THERE'S NOTHING
LIKE HOME OWNER·
SHIP. WE CAN HELP
YOU GET IT. CALL
992-3325 or "2·3176.

$3,500.

,litem Dopl
The Daily Sentinel

,rill

243 Wist 17 ~-lltw YDit, ~y
10011.
E ADD«tss,
ZIP, SIZl, ... snl£ NIIIIIU.
We streamlined the sewini 10

save you time so

)'(IU

can save

monO)! Send now foo NEW 1981
SPRlNC-SUMMER PATTERN CAr.
ALOG. 100 slyles, he pattern
coupon. (11 Volue). C.talot Sl.

IM-14 Oto!Q Qttlltl .. . , .$1.75
IJU11111111U11Qttlltillr .$1.75
UO·Sftltlti.S. JI.5U1.75
lzt.Qtildl£., TI'IIIIIM.$1.75

e:

992·2181
M•Tn St.
Pomeroy

come get a be autltul puppy
from
your
Humane
Society. All sizes, labs,
collies, poodles, setters

ALEXANDER SCHOOL
DISTRICT - A big 7
room home with ~
bedrooms, equipped kit·
chen, enclosed porch, 3
storage buildings, and 4
blo lots.
Recently
r~modeled .
ONLY!
$26,900.
A NICE STREET IN
MIDDLEPORT - Islhe
perfect place for a faml ·
ly and this two story
house with a full base·
ment has lots of room. It
has a Iaroe kitchen with
lots of storage, a dlntno
room and 3 bedrooms.
House Is In excellent
condition. ~2.600 .
PRETTY
BACK
YARD! And a one floor
plan house with 3
bedrooms. Has a full
basement and a screen·
ed In porch . .Needs some
work. ASKING$27,000.
A REAL BARGAINt This 2 bedroom home
comes with an equipped
kitchen, front porch,
dining room and Is In
pretty gOOd condition.
JUST I $11,000.
REALTOR
Henry E. Clefand, Jr.
"2·6191
ASSOCIATES
Jeon Trussell t4t·2UO
Roger I Dottle Turner
"2·MU
OFFICE "2·2259

tB

Trash Pickup In
The Village of
Middleport, Oh .
Ph . 992·5016
or 99:Z:7505
3-11 ·1

ROGER HYSElrS

GARAGE
-Auto and Truc:k
Repair
-Transmission
Repair
Hrs.: Mon.-Fri.
9 A.M.·S' )0 P.M.
992·5682

mo.

lO+Ifc

Mlu.ER ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For _all of ·vour wir·
ing needs.
Let George Miller check
your present electrical
svstem.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call742·3195
or 992·7680

2.8·tfc

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding
estimates,
949·l80l or
949. 2860 .
No Sunday Calls
3·1t ·Hc

ROOFING
"Specializing In
Re-Roofing"
• Small Carpet~r Jobs
Darrell Brfwer
PH. 992·2882
992·2606
992-7861
3·11 ·1 (l10 . pd .

992·6260.l~========~l=========~t=========~

looking for homes.
AKC Registered female
black toy poodle, 3 months
old. SISO. 992 ~ 7102.

Two AKC registered
cocker -spaniel puppies.
Black females. After 6 p.m.
call992·U71.

-............
.... ... ..... ...
.-

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

GRAVElY - Walk bttlind &amp;
riC1in9 tr~ctors . Push I self·pro .
mowen .
SNAPPER - Push &amp; uH p.-o .
mowers, r icling tractors .
ATlAS- Tillers
WE ED EATER - Brush cuUe r &amp;
trimmers
STIHL- Bnnh cutters &amp; t rim ·
ml'n

YAZOD-HI ·wheel mcwen
We ser111ce what we ~ell!
Smil l l Engines- Our Specially
204 conaor 5!.
Pomeroy, 01"1 .
PH . 991· 2fH
] 5 I mo

KAUFF'S

PLUMBING
AND
HEATING
12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-6263
· Anytime
3·2·1 mo.

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES
• Backl'!oe 1
• Excavating
• Septic Systems
eWater, Sewer &amp; Gas
Lines
Licensed &amp; Bonded

1971 Hillcrest Mobile
Home. 1st trailer on
Harrisonville Rd.

Farm Equipment
Kuker. 400 gal. spray; Int.
540. 4&lt;16" plows; M.F. 13.5'
Disc.: fert. auger; l set
snap on 15.5x38 dual tires;

Lots &amp; Acreage
LOT for sale,
$4,000.00. 992-2571.

N.~. 367 ManureHarogator;
Spreder ; ~~====~~~~====~ll.=========~~====~=======;;;==~
~~t. tractor, 986. 304·675
~y~PUE~~~R
H&amp;R BODY SHOP ~-~.;p KOU~~y

t.l

POMEijOY, 0 . .
992·~259
NEW LISTING - 1.25
acre trailer site In
Southern District. Has a
driveway and Is land·
scaped to accommodate
a mobile home. JUST!

Anne Adams

POMEROY

~LANDMARK
-

J&amp;C
SANITATION
SERVICE

'''· '~

Hulen

••• ·.

1973 House trailer, 12x60
l'h acre ground. 511,000.
142·2208.

35

TRAILE~

Acreage : One t~cre and one
half of ground located bet·
ween old Rt. 33 and new Rt.
33 I acing the Mel gs
Fairgrounds. $4000 .00. 992·
2571.
SEVERAL choice building
lots1 eastern District, Tup·
pers Plains·Chester water.
owner will help . finance .
992 ·5869.
.
V1 acre or more lots .
Located at Portland, Oh .
992 ·7330.

41
Houses for Rent
Six room house and bath
with utility room. City
water and gas. $150.00 per
month with $50.00 deposit.
Located on Nye Ave. Call
361· 7911.
42

Mobile Homes
tor Rent
2 bedroom Mobile Home.
Adults only . Brown ' s
Trailer Court, Minersville.
992·3324.
Three
home,
$175.00
deposit.

bedroom mobile
near · Cheshire .
per month, SSO.OO
367· 7811.

2 bedroom 11/ 2 baths ,
references &amp;
deposit
required. 992·2272. ·
Apartment
for Rent
3 AND ~ RM furnished ap·
ts. Phone 992-5434.

uc•

3 · 11 · 1 mo.

Only Ntw Oil Stove Closeout .
Slllf
UJO . OO
All ol tne above Item• In e•·
c•lle~t condition. All ~re priced
fCI 1111 lmmtdi.Jttly. 5ee Ul to-

-..

44

$2.00 "'
patllnl. Adll !!«
htl udt pottm htl filll·daa
limtail llld llaftdliltl. Sind II:

Ph. Pomeroy
614-992, 7038

M])WIIf

!- Good HotpointWutler
1-U"OETV
1-ncu . tt. tiotpoint
Rtfrleer.ttor
Sflil il few new Keroune

Reo I Esllte- Generol

Sew a d10ss for less. It'$ JUSI as
s•mr,le as that! No wa1st seam,
no 1«in1 problems- lhis llalle•·
1n1 desi1n falls loosely lrom
cuoved deta!l. then lakes a toe.
Prinled Paueon 4971 Half
Sizes 10\i, 1111, 1411. 1611.
1811, 10\1, 1111. Size 1411 (busl
37) tokes 1 518 yds. 60-in. fabric.

PACQUALE
ELECTRICAL CO.

Housinq
HeadquartPr&lt;:

WANTED · The following
musicians to form a rock
band · Leed guitar, second
gu itar, organ or piano
player, drummer, trumpet
player, tenor sax. Must be
able to play rock and soul
music. Interested people
niust have their own equip·
men!. Serious parties cal!
. 1·304·675·2210.

Will care for the elderly In
ovr home . Women, men, or
couples. Trained and ex·
perlenced. 992·7314.

Now ouylng gold and
silver, old pocket watches.
chains, diamonds, sliver
mo11ey and coins. Martin's
General Store, Middleport.
992·6370 .

ADress for less!

Resident Manager couple :
part time, small apartment
complex In the Middleport
area . No e'Kperience
required; wll!lraln. Apart·
ment and utilities paid . We
are looking for a mature
married couple. This Is an
excellent opportunity· for
the · retired or seml·retlred
couple looking for ad·
ditlonal lmcome. 1·614·864·
7186 from 9· ~ only .

Athens, OH . 594-4221 .
Wanted to Buy: class rings,
wedding bands, anything
stamped, IOK, 1~K. or 18K
gold. Silver coins, pocket
watches. Call Joe Clark at
992·2054 ot Clark's Jewelry
Store, Pomeroy, Ohio~S769 ·
CHIP WOOD . Poles max.
diameter 1•" on largest
end. $12.50 per ton. Bundled
slab . $10.50 per ton.
Delivered to Ohio Pallet
Co.. Rock Springs Rd .,
Pomeroy 991·2689. •

~..,

SUBSTITUTE Bookmobile
Driver·Cierk : Occasional
work on short notice to
drive bookmobile, do stm·
pie cler ical tasks, and work
with the public. Must have
high school diploma, valid
chaufler's license, and ex·
perience drlvlno large
truck . Pick up or wrtte for
job appl icatlon at OVAL
Bookmobile, 922 E. Main
St ., Pomeroy 45769.

Work tn daytime helping
elderly people. Rutland·
Pomeroy·Middlt!port area.

A~l-l~

HOBSTEITER REALTY
OFFICE 7~2-200!
George s. Hobstener Jr.
Broker
'ACREAGE -Approx. ~
acres with lovely home/
1.487 sq. ft. comfortable
living, 3 bedroom, 1&gt;.4
bath, central air, utility .
Asking $49,500. Also, op·
prox . 4 acres with
beautiful 3 bedroom
home, bath, large living
room, equipped kitchen,
wrap around decking,
over double garage and
.large workshop. Asking
$46,500.00. Or buy both
homes and 10 acres for
$87,500.00.
NEW HOME
3
bedroom, living room ,
dining kitchen comb,,
bath,utlllty, carport on
Iaqrge corner lot. Ask ·
Ing$41,000.00 .
LAND CONTRACT Large two Slory home
on front street. Owner
will finance at 10%.
'
Give us a call. We have
severe! Land Contr•ct
properties.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phooe 742-3171
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.
Phooe 742·3092
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....,

Business Services

Quilts , $25.00 each;
crocheted bedspreads for
$50.00 each. contacr Pearl
Garnes at 669·6Cl•l .

~1m&gt;

Beautiful three bedroom
ranch brick home In Baum
S ye~r old ranch styh~ Addition, Pomeroy, Ohio.
home, J bedrooms, equ ip· Gas heat, central air. Call
ped kitchen, garage , 992·2571 or 1·687·6.429.
basement, large lot . Price
negotiable. 992·7841 .
ATTRACTIVE home on
two and one·half acres.
Private setting on St. Rt. 7
Reel Estate- General
by ·Memory Gardens. Ter·
ms. 991·77 41.

Car salesman . Send
resume' to Box 179H , c-o
The Daily Sentinel. 111
Court Street, Pomeroy,
Oh iO ~769 .

COINS,
pocket
wat·
class 'r ings,
wedding
bands, diamonds . Gold or
silver. Call J . A. Wamsley,
Treasure Ches1 Coin Shop,

1HOOC:tHf
KI1'1ENS

t~--:::::::i::=:;~~=;;::::===-1

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

Attractive part time work
for
Well
groomed
homemakers who love
pretty fashions and want to
k.eep up on current styles .
Average SIO.OO per hour
plus free wardrobe for
those who qualify .
Management opportunity
open. For free lrifomation
please phone 992·3941 or
669·-4535.

12
Slluotlons Wonted
TREE TRIMMING and
removal . 949·2129 or 992·
6040 .

f

I

7 room &amp;. bath house.
Priced reasonably . Call af·
ter 7. 992·3592 .

$185.00 to $500 weekly doing
mailing work . No e)( perience required. AP·
PLY : Circle Sales, P.O.
Box 22,j ·D, Richmond Hill,
NY 11418.

~t .

Public Notice

pasture
land, Located
farm land,
gOOd
timber.
on
gOOd gravel road. $50.000.
949.2589 _

LADY or girl to live ln . 992·
2686.

e,or

Misc. Merchanlse

Firewood for hie. Hardwood, split &amp; delivered.
$30. load delivered . 992·
5240
.

Hames for Sale

65 acre farm, 6 room house,
out buildings. barn,
11

__YLE
__"'
_ _ _ _ _....:,:by:._l..arry:::,:.:_:W.:.;ri:.::Wl:::.tt 54
,.i&lt;JT....;;.'N_'_CARL

nfurni!hed one bedroom
apartment for rent. Ren·
ters assistance available
for senior citizens . Contact
VIllage Manor Apartments
at992 ·7787.
Four room apartment tor
rent. 992·5908.

Dunham

~4'

......................
• .J..o

I~ · '·' .&gt;.&amp;..~I

r o

7.,1_ _,.A.,u~to~s"f"or~Sa~l,ec.___
1976 Plymouth Valore
wagon, air conditioning,
etc .. very nice. $1.500.00 .
Glen. Bissell at 9~9 - 2801 or
949·2860.

SERVICES"

-Addonsand
remodeling
-Roofing and gutter
work
-Concrete work
-Piumblngand
electrical work
(Free Estimates)

1980 Honda Civic . 1,700
miles, $3,850. 1979 Pinto
24,000 miles, 51,750. 378·
6384 .
1967 Firebird Convertible .
Collectors item. 3 speed
trans. on floor, 326 engine,
new top. 992·3283.
72
Trucks for Sale
1979 DODGE 050, like new
cond. $4,600 . 992 ~ 2882 .

73
vans&amp;4W.D.
1978 Ford
F2SO 4 wheel
drive super cab, all extras ,
742 2068
good cond.
.
.

ALL STEEL

Farm Buildings
Siles
"From lOKJO"
SMALL

Utility Buildings
Sizes from 4JC6 to 12X40

81

Home
Improvements
Gene's Carpet Cleaning,
deep stream extraction.
Free
. estimated,
reasonabi'e rates, scot ·
chquard. 992·6309 or 742 ·
211!.

WILL DO ALL kinds of car ·
pentry work, including
paneling, ·cei!lngs, repairs,
etc . Experien ced, with
references. Phone 992·3941.
Will do carpenter work and
interior or exterior pain·
tlng. Free estimates . CALL
992-6190 or 949·2614 .

Three room and bath apar·
tment In Pomeroy. 992·
5621.

u

12

~ooms

s·leeplng rooms ; by the
week.
Kitchen, and
television lounge . Carryout
store and restaurant within
soo feet. 992-6370.
"
Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
992· 1~79 .

TRAILER spaces for rent.
Southern Valley Mobile
Home Pork, Cheshire, Oh.
992·3954.

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

......

' .,,,
' "'' ' '

53
Antiques
ATTENTION :
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec·
tlbles or entire estates .
Nothing too Iorge. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 61~ ·
767 ·3167 or 557·3411.
54
Misc. Merchonl!l
1980 Sears 10 h.p. 36 llich
riding mower. Phone 992 ·
2111 or 992·2528 after 5.

Plumbing

DENNEY
CHAIN LINK
FENCE
Free Estimates

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

KEN SOLES

Rt. 3, Box S4
Racine, Oh.
Ph. "4·843·259!

245-9113

~ ~
! ..
~1

· · ·
, •J;

'

c

_)..,.~

KWB

"'"'&lt;•m• ..
(htntr. otl.
uhartG•m•
s,ecl•lltt•

.. Puu;~ 11 &amp; c~l,., l llt
Gnen1 Nowo""
•Gatt LmoruF•r,l.liAtn
1
We aller lor ule. top qullltw boelllftd
~~oe1 . er1no r,.mes Uke :
BROWNING : work , hiking, hu,nllnt ~~,•

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING
All types of root work,
new or repair gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed.
Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Cit II Howard
949·2862
949·2160

~~~~~~~~6·=!~5·=tf~c~~~============2~-1~9~-l~fc~~==::::::::::~2=-·=.4·~tf=.c~:
ROUSH

CONSTRUCTION

French City Painting .
Residential , commercial,
interior,
exterior.
Specializing in Interior
painting, paper hanging &amp;
textured cell ings. Free
estimates. 367·7784 or 367·
7160.

Furnished

Body Repair ·Insurance
work · Collision Repair.
Expert painting, body
work, pinstriping &amp;
vinyl tops.
Free Estima1es
Call 992·3411
Kingsbury Rd., 2 mi.
west Co. Rd. 18.
Pomeroy,Oh. 45769
Domestic, Japanese &amp;
11.
European Cars ~
Trucks.
2. 15 _1 mo.

lll~lno bOGIS. lll10 PrG • Sh~ tOI , CUIII •
1974 Chevy Impala , 350
V.c. YOUNG II
tarm•r•nOiott intsr.~n .
auto. First $700 . buys it .
992·621 s or 992-7314
WI Jl l G urr~ .. to"' pi Ill ''"' ot Brown·
•nuP•~r""' Good•.
Also 5 h.p. Briggs·Siralen ,
Pomeroy, Oh.
new last spring, side shaft .
S60. 2nd trailer on the right ~----------jf------------+---------­
Wolf Pen Rd . off 143.

• New Homes· extensive remodeling
• E lectrica I work
• Roofing work
12years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph . 992· 7583
2·13·1 mo.

REESE ~j9 ~ KAPPLIANCE,SERvlc"E
~

TRENCHING
SERVICE

water-Sewer·E lectric
Gas Line·Ditches
Water Line Hook ·ups
Septic Tanks
county Certilied
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph. 36HS60
1·7·ttc

Call Ken Young
For Fut Service

985-3561
PARTS ANO SERVICE
ALL MAKES
eW&lt;~shers
eDI1001•1s
• Drrers
• D l ~tlw.utlers
eR1nges
eHo!WIItrT.Jfl/1:1
Rep.Jirlng Slnct19U

"Spec I• I Ritts For"
L•undrlts
.... Rent• I Propertits
...- Apt . Ho~srOwntrs
... Mobile Homr Plrka
.-~ Coin

1-----------1----------ELECTRICAL
SUPPLIES
Residential &amp; Light
Commercial Electrical
~"Dplies

5 room &amp; bath apt. close to
town. Call after 7 p.m. 992·
3592.

DUMP TRUCK
ph. 992-7201
3-5· 1 mo.

Qualify Products
Reasonable Prices

JOYCE ELECTRICAL
SU PPLIES

College Rd.
S v r a c use,
0 h.
Ph . 992· 3804
2·13·1 mo .

THE DABBLE SHOP
NOW OPEN
Mon .·Wed. 10 :00·9:00
Tues.·Fri.·Sal.
10:00-5:00 '
Closed Th urs diiYS
Stop in and see our line
of plastercratt. You can
eniov makinca vour Cliffs
and netp fight inllation
Located next to Dale
Hill Ford Tractor in
Pomerov.
2·23·! mo.

CUNNINGHAM :
&amp;ASSOC.
Mortgage Bankers ·
992-7544
VA lot~ns no money down
.

Fe3~roa~ ~~~,:g-

S% on balance.
Conventional Loans- .
S%
down
Call lor Information .
992·7544
·
1.21 tiC

r~~=======~~~~t=:=:::::=:::===~~====~~~~~
DAVID BRICKLE$
HART'S
~~a~ona~~~~~untDo'~~~~~:
CONSTRUCTION
TRASH HAULING

WATER&amp; Heating
WELLS .
Domestic
and
commercial,
pump sales and service.
ps. 1·304·895·3002 or 1·304·
895·364!.

ll
Excavating
COMPLETE sever In·
stal lation &amp; backhoe ser·
vice for Racine-Syracuse
sewer district. Dozer work
If needed. 949·2293.
Dozer work . Sma II iobs a
specialty . 741·1753.
14

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

1·13·1 mo. pd .

(4 Bags Limit Per week(
PHONE 992-7802
or 992-7443
2·13·1 mo.·

ARD

GAWA

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

Bedford Township
and
Flatwoods Area.
$5.00 Per Month
Weekly Pickup

Electrica I
&amp; R efrlgeration

SEWING MACHINE
Repairs, service,
all
makes1 992 · 228~ . The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorlred Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.
ELWOOD
BOWERS
·REPAIR
Sweepers,
toasters, Irons, all small
appliances . Lawn mower.
Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 965·
3125.

S0"-2o-30'H, P,
A 60"-25· 60 H. P.
60"-45·80 H:P .
All Models
Available
LEOMDRRIS
Rt. 1 Side Hill Rd .
Rutland , 0~ .
2 9 tfc

REFRIGERATION:
INC.
R heem, Amana
&amp; Carrier
AIR CONDITIONERS
&amp; HEAT PUMPS
Ph. 614-992-7038
3· 11-1 mo.

' ''

·'
I

�•

Thursday, March 12,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

. Page-14-The Daily Sentinel

at y

·House approves bill recognizing employee contracts
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - House
members have approved a bill
recognizing public employee contracts over claims it will do nothing
to help solve the workers' strikes in
Ohio.
Representatives sent to the Senate
on Wednesday by a 7:&gt;-21 vote a
measure by Rep. Casey Jones, DToledo, under which agreements
between public employers and their
workers would be enforceable under
law.
State law currently is silent regarding such contracts. But Jones' bill
would identify the pacts' existence
, and put into the statutes what
' already is practiced widely in Ohio.
Jones did not say his measure
would head off future public employee strikes, such as those which
recently have hit schools and police
and fire departments across the
state.
But Rep. Charles R. Saxbe, RMechanicsburg, said Ohioans should
be aware of the bill's limited nature.
The Legislature should "start
tomon:ow" on a major, com·
prehensive collective bargaining
measure that protects the rights of
both employers and public workers.
"All of us know that employers do
not always live up to these contracts,'' he said.
Recalling that GOP Gov. James A.
Rhodes vetoed lawmakers' last effort to enact a bargaining bill, Sax be
said another should be passed
"whether the governor wants it or
not."
Rep. Robert E. Netzley, R-Laura,
who opposes Jones' bill, said it
clears the way for state and local

-

governments to negotiate themselves into strike and mandatory arbitration situations. "It's a blueprint
for the harassment of the public by
public servants who will become the
masters," said the 21-year veteran
of the House and one of its most outspoken conservatives.
Another opponent, Rep. Waldo
Bennett Rose, R-Lima, was voted
down 61K16 on an amendment
requiring employers to use the
state's Ferguson Act, which
prohibits public strikes, rather than
opt for injunctive relief in the courts.
Most employers now go into the
courts, he said.
His amendment would have forced
employers to notify strikers of a
deadline to return to . work or face
dismissal. Walkouts ended promptly
in his county and elsewhere when
the full force of the Ferguson Act
was implemented, he said.
But Rep. J . ·Leonard Camera, DLorain, longtime labor leader and
chairman of the commerce and
labor committee. said Rose's amendment made the Ferguson Act" 'look
like a cream puff." He scoffed at
claims by the bill's mostly GOP opponents that it could lead to strikes,
mandatory arbitration, dues
checkoffs and other contract
provisions not permitted by present
law.
"We've had contracts for 25 years
in my little city of Lorain," Camera
said. But there may be some counties "that are living back in the
1920s" and "maybe Medina is one of
them," he said.
Camera referred to the county of
Rep. William G. Batchelder, R-

FAITH AND BEGORRA!!
SAINT PATRICK
HELPS YOU SAVE

ss

A PAIR

WITH THE PURCHASE OF
ANY PAIR IN THE STORE
AT STICKER PRICE.
5 GROUPS MEN'S SHOES

Medina, who said the biU could
prompt the involvement of ar-

bitrators and mediators "who can
vote money out of the public

was gaveled out of order and told to
stick to tlie immediate subject.
'

treasury." Twice during his speech
against the measure, Batchelder

SATURDAY,
MARCH 14

I
BOYS' K·NIT SHIRTS
I
I

TWO DAY SALEI

SALE PRICE$1

MEN'S
FASHION
JEAN
Sizes :i9 to 40 waist.

NEW SPRING SELECTION

Lengths 30 to 36. Cot,on
polyester blended twill
material. True western
styling. Solid colors.
$14.95 FASHION
JEANS ......... $11.88
$15.95 FASHION
J

Introduc tory sale prices on entire stock in·
eluded . Short steeve styles and tank tops in·
eluded .

Boys $5.95 Knit Shirts .. . .....
Boys 57.95 Knit Shirts .... •.. .
Boys S9.95 Knit Shirts .. . . . ...
BoysSI0.95KnitShirts .......

54.99
S6.79
S8.49
$9.29

WOMEN'S

SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE

SALE
A must for your Spring ward ·
robe and at Sate Prices!

A ll w eather , polyester and suede
styl es. Just right for the Spring
Season !
Sizes 8 to 20 and l6 1f2 to 24,12.

..........
. ...•. . ...
. ..... . . ..
. ... . ... ..
... .. .. ...

\

Camisoles. half slips, full slips
- and long slips.

Reg. $4.00
Sate S3.40
Reg. $6.00 .. . Sale 55.10
Reg. $9.00 . . . Sale $7.65
Reg . $12.00 . Sale 510.20

531 .00
$37.00
$54.00
562.00
572.00

MEN'S WRANGLER 519.95

BUSY MAN - Bob CampbeU, job superintendent for Ontario
Plpelloe, lbe firm baodllog lbe laylnglbe sewer llDes to the village of
Racine at the preseot lime was busy at one of the job sites Thursday oo
Malo Street. The villages of Syracuse and Racloe are locluded lo the
$5,t10,000 project.

MEN'S SHORT
.SLEEVE

BASIC DENIM JEANS
Sizes 27 to 42 waist in straight
leg or boot flare style . 14 112
ounce No Fault blue denim
pre-washed. Special Friday
and Saturday Sale .

ToDAY

DRESS
SHIRTS

••• IN THE ~W ..

VALUES FROM 123 to 145

•

Solid colors. Neck sizes
to 17. Two pockets. full cut.
Regularly $7 .95.

SALE STARTS ON WCKY, FRIDAY 13TH

WASHINGTON - Reacting to concern that it is risking a new Vietnam-type conflict, the Reagan administration is suddenly speaking
softly about Its mvolvement in El Salvador while sending Green
Berets to train govenunent troops in guerrilla warfare.
. Several officials said the administration has decided against any
deeper involvement in El Salvador, barring some major setback to the
govenunent at the hands of Marxist guerrillas. And even then, no one
was prepared to predict the United States would do anything more.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

umE BOYS' SUMMER TOPS
Tanks. otackets and knit taos in
light and cool summer colors and
fabri cs . Sizes 2 to.t and 4 to 7.

SPRING TOPS SALE
All new line of spr ing fasion tops for
gir ls sizes 2 to 4, 4 to 6x and 7 to 14.
Tanks, Blouses , Midriffs and Knits.

RETIREMENT AN

REG . 52.50 . ... ......... . SALE 52.09
REG . 53.75 . ... ... . . . .... SALE 53.19
REG. 55.50 .. .... ..... .. . SALE 54.6t
REG . 58.00 .. . .. . ....... . SALE $6.79
REG. $13 .00 ............ SALE 511.09

GIVE YOURSELF A
TAX BREAK.

Reg. $3.75
Reg. $4.50
Reg. S5.75
Reg. 57 .so

Recommends draft reinstitution
WASIUNG TON - A Pentagon advisory panel is recommending that
Congress conalder reinstituting a version of the military draft that
would require youths to serve six montha and then decide whether to
stay on active duty longer or join the reserves.
Louis J. Conti, chainnan of the Reaerve Forces Policy Board, called
this a "try it before you buy it" approach.
Reporting to Congress, Conti noted recent increases in Reserve and
National Guard strength but said the board still is concerned over
"inadequate force levels which must be responsive to mobiliziltion
demands."

..... Sale S3.19
..... Sale S3.79
Sale $4.89
Sale $6.39 "
/

Murderer may be 'gentle killer'

How' Oy esrabl1shtr.g your ow n ltiCivtCucl

Renremenr Accounr
If you quol1fy you m&lt;lY deocsu up rc 15 ~1 ct
your onnuoltncoi"T'.e or SI 5CO w n tc:'le Ye ' 1S tei5

per yeor II"'TO

your 11\A Accovnr

SALE

All your I!'\A depostrs may oe d eauaed from yol.:r
rOAoble gross eorn•ngs for Federal tncom e rex
purposes. And you II earn ra~· frE?-e dtvtde nas on

SPRING AND SUMMER

your renremem sovtngs root

HANDBAGS

Come 11"1 and seE&gt; us rodcv We II snow you "ow
on IAA Accounr mol~e~ dollcr'i and sense now
ond for your renremenr yeors.

New styles Include Banji, eyelet, terry ,

WALLPAPER SALE
SAVE 20% WA:~;~~ER!
The latest colors, patterns and
textures at 20% Savings .
Now lhru March 21, 1981.

macrame, gauze, leather, straw , can ·

FREE

vas and others .

REG . 57.00 . .•. . . . ..... . . SALE 5l.S9
REG . 511.00 . . ........... SALE 58.79
REG . 511 .00 ... . .. , .. .. SALE $13 .59
REG. $25.00 ..... .. . .. .. SALE $19.99
REG. 531.00 .. . ..•• , .... SALE 524.79

SPINE SAVER
Reg. $299.90 Twin Set .. . ... . .... Sale$149.95
Reg. $359.90 Full Set .. : ......... Sale$179.95
Reg. $449.90 Queen Set .......... Sale $224.95

6 MONTH MONEY MARKET

13.67%
Substantial Penalty for Early Withdrawal

Our docoratlng consultant will bt
glad to come to your home and
help you choose colors and pat·

SOLD IN
SETS
ONLY

UPRIGHT SWEEPER
6 position dial ·a· nap, dual edge cleaner.
Bright headlight, disposable top loading dust
bag. Sale!

•at•s

Model1458A

TOOLSET INCLUDED FREE

STORE HOURS: FRIDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 8 P.M.: SATUIDA ~ 9a30 A.M. TO 5 P.M.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
3R D ST., RACINE, OH.
Member FDIC

'

veyor for Ontario, average depth of
the lines is six feet, however, the line
past the treatment plant will be
eight feet deep.
According to Bob· Campbell, job
superintendent, and Puckett,
residents can expect to be inconvenienced unttl the tines are all
in place.
Puckett said lines will be com·
pleted in both villages, barring
major complications and weather,
by the end of October or the first of
November. The treatment plant,
however, will take much longer .to
complete.
Village residents'can expect to see
large equipment and trucks on
village streets.
Beginning today through Tuesday,
one crew will be working at Fourth
and Vine, Fourth and Main and up
the alley between Pearl and Main.
When this job is completed, workmen will proceed up SR 338 to
Yellow Bush. The following 12 days
work will be up Yellow Bush past the
proposed tretment plant site.
The second crew from March 13,
through March 17, will be working at
Fourth and Pearl to Fourth and SR
124. The following week or week and
a half (weather permitting) work
will be done in the area around
Racine Elementary SchooL If the
weather fails to cooperate work at
Racine Elementary will be dropped
temporarily and they will continue
up SR 124 to Tyree Blvd.

PUTI'ING IN MANHOLE- Workmen for Ontario lloes will be sii feet in depth with lbe exception of the
Pipelloe were busy Thursday putting In a manhole at lloe that goes by the treatment plant which will be
Fourth ami Vine In the village of Racine. Most of the elghtfeelln depth.

ATLANTA- The medical examiner who performed an autopsy on
the latest victim in a series of 20 child slayings here says the last seven
cases are "disturbingly similar" and show evidence that links the victims to a "gentle killer."
Joe Burton, chief medical examiner for suburban DeKalb County,
said Thursday thatl!l-yeal'&lt;lld Curtis Walker, like the six youngsters
before him, was asphyxiated.
Burton said neithet Walker nor tbe others had been mutilated and
their remains showed no indication of violence or signs that they had
resisted abduction.

David L. Elkins, 38, Albany, is ·residence.
•
being held in Meigs County Jail on
According to statements Elkins
six charges following an incident had gone to Wessels' residence, apnear Snowville Thursday eveping.
parently looking for another residen. According to Meigs CountY Sheriff ce as he kept calling the wrong
James J. Proffitt, Elkins was taken name. This was shortly after 8 p.m.
into custody at the reside~ of Pat The family finally · got Elkins to
Wessels on SR 681 at approximately leave, but, he returned within five
S: 50 p.m. where he was charged with minutes.
aggravated menacing, two charges
of criminal damaging, disorderly
When Elkins returned 19-year old
conduct, criminal trespass and Robert Wessels went 19 the door and
resistinRarrest.
ordered him to leave. At that time,
According to the report Elkins Elkins is alleged to have threatened
allegedly shot through a sliding to shoot them.
glass door, but it was later learned
Quickly locking the door, the
that no shots were fired. The noise Wessels family fled upstairs. Elkins
was the result of Elkins breaking the allegedly took a piece of firewood
glass in a sliding door at Wessels' and broke the thermo pane sliding

door which caused Mrs. Wessels to
fear that he had shot a gun. She im·
mediately called the sheriff's office.
After Elkins entered the home he
continued calling them by the wrong
name .and threatened to kill them if
they did not come down and talk to
him. While walking around downstairs, Elkins allegedly knocked out
a side window.
Following a brief scuffle with
Deputy Manning Mohler, Elkins was
taken into custody. After being put
in the crosier Elkins kicked out the
side glass of the crusier.
Deputies from Athens and Vinton
Counties were en route to assist when
they were notitified that Elkins had
been apprehended.

In other matters, sheriff's
deputies are . inyesUgaUng a
breakmg and enter.mg of a house
owned by Denver R1ce, Middleport,
that IS .located on Cherry Ridge.
Practically all of the furniture and
other 1tems had been.removed.
It was reported that a nwnber of
batteries were taken from used cars
at Riggs Used Cars, Chester, Wednesday night.
Thursday evening at approximately 10:30 p.m. a deer ran
into the path of a vehicle going
southbound on county road 28 driven
by Hilton Wolfe, Jr., Racine. There
was moderate damage to the left
side of the vehicle.

Black lung funds won't be cut off
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) The Reagan administration's
proposed changes In the black lung
program will not affect coal miners
and their families currently collecting the benefits, il top Labor Depar1
tment spokesman says.
"All retired and fonner miners
presently drawing benefits will continue the same as before," said J olut
Leslie in a copyright story published
Thursday in the Charleston Daily
Mail.
"No current beneficiaries of the

black lung program will have any
change in their entitlement. That is
one of our main points," he said.
Leslie also said that a General Accounting Office report that said 88
percent of black lung claimants
were not actually disabled by black
lung won't be used In reducing
eligibility for the funds.
''We are not buying that report on
its face, although we are not saying
there is no validity to it," he said.
"Nobody is trying to change the

definition of black lung. We just
want to take prudent steps to make
sure that people who go on the
program in the future have the
disease:
" New medical teclutology makes
it easier to ascertain whe.ther a person has black lung and to what
degree."
Some 6,000 coal niiners held a
demonstration In Washington, D.C.,
earlier this week to protest planned
cuts in the federal black lung

program announced by the Reagan
administration. Some of the miners
said they feared that the black lung
beQefits would be reduced or
eliminated to those miners and their
families who now receive the
payments.
Reagan budget officials say the
Black Lung Disability Trust Fund,
which now supplies a large share &lt;X
black lung payouts, will be fl billion
in debt if changes are not made in
the program.

Motor vehicle taxes decline
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Motor fuel tax collections in Ohio declined for
the 20th consecutive month in January.
The 7 cents-per-gallon state fuel tax brought $31.2

milliot~ to stale
two months ago, down 2.38 percent from a year ago.
The tax was collected on sales of 455.6 million gallons of fu.el in
January, down 2.5 percent from the previous year. State motor fuel
taxes collected fr001 July 1980 through January totaled $223.4 million,
down $13.5 million from the same montha in the previous fiscal year.
Vehicle fuel taxes are used for state and local road and bridge
repairs.
coffer.~

terns .

EUREKA 5119.90

MATTRESS AND BOXSPRING SETS

/

Albany man faces multiple
LD charges following incident

Reagan staffers speak softly

THE SHOE BOX

SAVE FOR

Thursday one crew was on Third
Stl'J'el while another crew was
working at Fourth and Vine. Tbe
main line comes from the pump
station then goes to Yellow Bush
where the treatment plant will be
built. .
According to ·J . W. Puckett, sur-

WOMEN'S SLIPS

SPRING COAT SALE
REG . 539.00
REG . 546.00
REG . 568.00
REG . 578.00
REG. 590.00

BY KATIE CROW
The $5,400,000 sewage project for
the villages of Syracuse and Racine
is well underway with lines presently being laid in the village of Racine
by two crews employed by Ontario
Pipeline, Inc., Pittsford, N. Y., who
received the bid for distribution of
lines.

l Section, 10 Pages 1S Cents
, A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Middleport, Ohio, Friday, March 13,1981

Ontario lrm
lays sew.er line

ET READY FOR SPRI
SALE
TWO DAYS ONLY

Pomeroy

enttne

•

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
FRIDAY,
MARCH 13

Vol.:zt,No. 230
Copyrlphted 1tl1

•

Winning Ohio lottery number
ClEVELAND - The winning numbers selected Thursday night in
the Ohio LOttery's dally game "The Number" and weekly "Pyramid"
game are:
The Number- 216
Pyramid - 90; 453; 6271
The lottery reported earnings fo $156,719.50 from the wagering on
the dally number game drawing. Lottery officials said sales prior to
the drawing totaled $948,436, and holders of winning tickets are en•
titled to share $789,716.50.

Weather
Partly cloudy tonight. Lows 26-30. Mostly sunny Saturday. Highs
near 50. Chance of precipitation 10 percent tonight and Saturday, ·
Eslellded Oblo ForecasiSunday thought Tuesday:
·
Fair Sunday and Tuesday but a chance of showers Monday. Highs in
mid-408 to mid-50s and lows In mid.20s to mid-.'!Os.

POINT, COUNTERPOINT - Seaale Bqet Committee Chairman
Pete DomeDicl, left, R-N. M., quest1o01 Bacl&amp;et director David Stockman,
rtght, duriag tesllmooy • Pneldnt Reagan's budget cuts In

Wasblogton, Thursday. Stookman said lbat It would be wroog to make
cuts In sodal weUare programs 111 such a way that would provide 1tban full protection for their beneficiaries. (AP Laserpboto).
•

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