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Pluga Into your
Clg1rette Lighter

•

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enttne
.

Vot.29, No. 232

DESIGNE

Copyriphted U81

2 sections, 16 Pages
15 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . New5eaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday. March 1,7,1981

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WASHINGTON (AP) - Qmtract
talks between the United Mine
Workers and the soft coal industry
broke off early today In an apparent
impasse over the volatile issue of
miners' working hours .
Representatives of the UMW and
the Bituminous Coal Operators
Association , the industry'S
bargaining ann, !lad continued to
·talk past the union's self-imposed
midnight deadline, signaling
progress toward a settlement that
would avert a strike March 27, when
the current three-year contract expires.
· But the session at a downtown
Washington hotel broke up shortly
after 4 a.m. EST and negotiators left
the room grim-faced .
And, for the first time since the
talks entered the critical stage over
the weekend. the two sides failed to
announce jointly when they would
meet again.
Union officials said they expected
to reswne bargaining by mid·
morning .
But the BCOA's three representatives, asked if that timetable were
correct, refused to comment.· The

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Expect strong restriction push

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WASHINGTON - U the Reagan administration fails to negotiate auto
import limitations with the Japanese. there is likely to be "a strong
push in Congress lor unilaterally imposed import restrictions," Rep.
Tony Hall , f).()hio, said today .
" In view of the apparent willingness of the Japanese to conduct
these negotiations soon, it would make more sense for the ad·
ministration to take the initiative;" Hall said in remarks prepared for
a conference of the United Auto Workers' Conununlty Action Program
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trio, briefcases in hand, headed to
the association 's Washington
headquarters.
UMW bargainer Tom Gaston said
afterward that the two sides had
failed to resolve differences over the
industry's efforts to put mines on a
seven-day production schedule.
" There is still a loi of ground to be
covered," said Gaston.
He said the industry had dropped
its proposal to have miners work
mandatory overtime but said the
mine operators were continuing to
insist on keeping mines open all
week.
The 160,000 miners covered by the
UMW contract now work a six·day
week with Sundays off. Gaston indicated the union is willing to work
on Sundays - but only if the miners
get a five-day week in exchange.
The industry has sought the sevenday production schedule to utilize
expensive mining equipment and to
improve mine output.
Gaston said he feels the industry
will retreat from its efforts to
replace the existing multi-employer
pension fund with company-by·
(Continued on page 16)

'. '
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RIYADH, Saudi Arabia - Saudi Arabia and three other Persian
Gulf oil producers met today amid speculation they were about to
decide on a big cutback in their crude oil production to offset the glut
on world markets.
The lour countries together produce 14 million barrels of crude oil a
day, with Saudi Arabio alone pumping 10.3 million barrels.
The session brought together Oil Ministers Sheik Aluned Zaki
'tamani of Saudi Arobia, Sheik Ali Khalifa ai-Sabah of Kuwait, Mana
Saeed Dtelba of the United Arob Emirates and Sheik AbdelAziz Bin
Kholifa ai-Thani of Qatar.

China will get food from EEC
BRUSSELS, Belgium - The European Economic Community
decided today to give $6.2 million worth of food to the United NatiollS
for distribution in China, a reliable diplomatic source said .
It would be the first time In its 22 years history that the !().nation
EEC sent aid to China and an apparent confinmtlon of reports that
serious food shortages may be causing problems j n two Chinese
provinces.

Met~enbaum has own

cut plan

WASHINGTON - Sen. Howard M. Metzenbaum, f).()hio, says he
plans to present revisions to Budget Committee sessions this week that
would lighten President Reagan's budget cuts by $14.9 bllhon.
As the panel began work on the budget M~nday. Metzenbaum sai~
his .proposals would be financed partly by mcreasmg certam'USers
fees - Including aviation ond water users' fees - and ehminat1qg tax
breaks for certain special groups.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVEI..AND - The winning number selected Monday night in the
Ohio l..&lt;lttery's daily game "The Nwnber" is 48:i.
.
The lottery reported earnings of $6li8,447.50 from the wagering on
the drawing. l..&lt;lttery officials said sales prior to the drawing totaled
$1,052,956.50, and holders of winning tickets are entitled to share
$394.509.

Wcotht~ r
Mo~Uy cloudy tonight and Wednesday with a chance of snow and
rain Wednesday . lAws tonight in the mid·20s. Highs Wednesday in the
low to mid-40s. Chance of precipitation 20 percent tonight and 30 percent Wednesday . Winds northeasterly around 10 mph tonight.
Extended Ohio ForecastThuniday through Saturday:
Generally fair weather through the period, except for a chance of
snow flurries aortbea11 on Thursday and Friday. Highs In the 3011
Thursday and upper 308 to mid-411!l Friday and Saturday. Lows at night
In the upper leenN and lower 20s early Thursday and In the 20s Friday
and Saturday.

•

COAL TALKS EXTENDED- United Mine Workers President Sam
Church, right, and Walter Suba sit across the hargainlng table from B. R.
"Bobby' Brown, left, president of Consolidation Coal Co., as they

negollale a new agreement for the soft coal Industry. A 12:01 a.m,
Tuesday deadiJDe was averted when the negotiators agreed to e.tend the
talks for 24 hours. (AP Laserphoto).

No action taken

Pomeroy council receives sewer bids
By KATIE CROW
Submitting the three lowest bids
Thirteen bids were received on the were Empire Pipe Corp., Dayton,
extension of the sewage system, totaling $179,664.95 ; R. A. Bores Exfrom the Kroger Store to Kerrs Run, cavating, Colwnbus, $189,773 and
Mayor Clarence Andrews disclosed · Allan Stone and Co, Inc., Chesterhtll,
at Monday's bimonthly Pomeroy $189,781.50.
Council meeting.
In other business, council ap·
Andrews reported a decision will
proved the ordinance calling for
be made following a review of the
salary increases to_all.j!mployes of
bids. A meeting is scheduled next
the village, except patro)men .
Monday evening to discuss an
A five percent.W:~ea$e was..gran·
easement from a property owner on
ted dispatchers, a ' ·meterman,
East Main Street.
secretary, street. cemetery and

water deparbnent employes.
Given more than a five percent in·
crease were · Don Ward, assistant
street superintendent; cemetery
super\lisor, Reed Will, and Wes
Manley.
Meeting with council were 01'\/ile
Wiles and Jack Seidenabel,
cemetery trustees.
Wiles ,
spokesman, asked council to pur·
chase six loads of limestone for the
roads leading to the cemetery. Coun·
cit agreed.

Wiles also said a public meeting
will be held (date to he announced)
for all those persons owning lots at
Beech Grove. Wiles said he wants
owners of lots to voice their opinion
and wish to work with them in main·
taining the cemetery.
John Anderson, councilman,
asked council to consider
specifications for a new police
cruiser in order that it can advertise
for bida as soon as possible.
(Continued on page 16 )

Board rehires principals; co-coach resigns
The resignation of Michael
Winebrenner as a head football
coach was accepted Tuesday night
when the Southern Local School
District Board of Education met in
regular session.
Winebrenner, this past season,
ser\led as e&lt;&gt;-head coach with
Howard Caldwell for the season.

Prior to that time had ser\led
several years as assistant football
coach in the district. He will remain
in the district as a teacher.
The board gave new three year
contracts to James Adams, high
school principal; Jennings Beegle,
junior high principal, and Robert

Beegle, Racine Elementary School
principal. A detailed district health
philosophy and policies statement as
prepared by Joyce Thoren, district
nurse, was approved.
Connie Enslen was given per·
mission to attend the girls state
basketball tournament in Colwnbus
March 19-20 and Carl Wolfe and

Howar~ Caldwell were given permission · to attend the boys state
basketball tournament in Columbus
March 26-27.

Bills, the financial statement and
activity fund statements were approved by all members of the board
attending last night's session.

Move begins
•
to retam
tax
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
move is under way in the legislature
to retain temporary tax hikes which
took effect at the start of the year
and are to end June 30.
Rep. Pete Crossland, [).Akron,
saying he's concerned about cut·
backs in services to the poor, elderly
and mentally ill, announced the ef·
fort at a news conference Monday
while admitting he lacks leadership
support.
Crossland, Democratic chairman
of the hwnan ser\lices section of the
House Finance Committee, said he
wants to keep at least some of the
taxes to add from S200 million to $300
million to . the state's 1981·1983
budget.
He plans to offer an amendment,
as yet undrafted, eannarking the
proceeds from continuing the tax
hikes for aging , health,
rehabilitation services, public
welfare, mental retardation and
mental health.
These programs are funded at a
level about $325 million less than
requested by agency directors . And
unless appropriations are increased,
there will be "untold hwnan suf·
fering," Crossland said.
The lawmaker indicated he will
seek to have the amendment In·
serted into the budget bitl currently
under study by various subsections
and the full finance corrunittee. His
panel reswnes hearings Wednesday
on proposed welfare spending for the
biennium starting July I.
Most of this week's activities in
the Legislature will be in the House.
Senators are holding skeleton
sessions only under a previously an·
nounced plan to curtail sessions until
they receive the budget bill from the
House.
Crossland said he had not decided
which tax hike he wants to retain .
But he's asking Gov. James A.
Rhodes to join his effort and make 1
reco1 nnlcnda lion.
.I

ST. PATRICK'S- This Is the day for the wearln'
II the green and advising you to have a happy St.

Patrlck'1Day Is BennyEwln~. sonofMr, andMn. Ben
Ewing of Pome':"y.

�Commentary
.
---

How did we ever survive ?..____ _ _ __
WASIDNGTON - It's getting
pretty noisy around our town. For
the past week, ever since Mr.
Reagan sent up his definitive
proposals to cut federal spending
and to reduce federal \llX rates, the
outcry has been horrendous. Permit
me, it I may, to holler back.
A word, first, about what the ad·
ministration is trying to do. It is
trying to avert economic disaster. It
is trying to reduce the role of the
federal government in our lives. Mr.
Reagan proposes to restore some of
the responsibilities of state and local
government. He is asking Congress
to shore up national defense that
have declined disturbingly in
relation to Soviet power.
Now, those are laudable objectives. To judge from last November's election returns, not only in the
presidential race but also in
senatorial contests, the president's

proposes overwhelmingly are eDdorsed by the American people. The
people voted for change - for
drastic change - and that is
precisely what Mr. Reagan is offering. He wants to reverse a ~year .
thrust in public policies.
Behold the uproar . You would
think the people had elected Genghis
Khan and restored the court of
Marie Antoinette. Over on the house
side of Capitol Hill, where the
Democrats can pick and choose
conunittee witnesses , we have seen
a staged parade of the week, the halt
and the destitute. The Washington
Post, casting objectivity to the winds, has gone overboard; the
newspaper has assigned whole
teams of bleeding hearts, weepeasies, sob sisters and crybabies to
agonize over the cruelties that Mr.
Reagan would impose. The
television networks have been per-

'

The Daily Sentinel
lll COIU1 Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
IIHt%-115&amp;
DEVOTED TO TilE INTERFSI' OF 111£ MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publilb~r

BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD

~ueral

AssiAtaDt Publlsber/Ceatroller

Maoacer

41'

~ 'N

. 8£1

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generation
surviveI will
without
these costly ever
programs?
tell
you a true story of a Depression
family broken by divorce in 1937.
The oldest girl, 22, dropped out &lt;t
college to make her own way as a
commercial artist. The older boy,
16, borrowed money to buy a
camera, took up photography, and
worked his way through college in

-

The ,Reagan proposala would not
subsidy. There weren't any Pell
approach
a return to that InGrants for college tuition. No food
dependence.
T~ president is recomstamps. No Aid to Families with
mending
changes
that would have a
Dependent Children. No taxrelatively
small
effect on most
financed legal aid. Bu,t there was
beneficiaries.
Cwnulatively,
hill
something else - a sense of selfreduc~ons
in
federal
spending
would
reliance, a gritty determination to
suryive and get ahead, a feeling that add up to a giant step toward fiscal
nobody owed us a living. In the cities sanity. Mr. Reagan is trying to get a
and on the farms, the rule wils rope on a runaway horse. If the
make-do; the rule was root, hog, &lt;r Humane Society will quiet down, he
may yet succeed.
die.

A MEMBER of The Au;oclaled Pm11. lalnd Dtli1y Pins Auoci1tloo 1od t.bt
Amt'lican Newl prllper Pu.bli1bc-n Au oclatioo,

LEITERS OF OPINION are welcom~ . Tbey sbouJd be leu than 301 'lti Onb loog, All
lerten are 8Ubjed to edUiog aod mu..l br sl(oed wUb u.ame. 1ddrns ud klepboM
number. No UBIIigaed lettert wiD be pubUsbed. I.A'Ikn should be lo &amp;ood Iaiit. addrusifll
tuuet, not penooaUtie~~ .

'

Letter to the editor
Let's he realistic
In response to letter to the editor
dated March 12 by Floyd Cleland of
Rutland.
l am a registered Republican as
are the majority of my fellow Meigs
County citizens.
We all know we need to cut big
goverrunent spending and l believe
we should. I would cut foreign aid,
but why should our job's programs
· be cut when our national unemployment is at about eight percent.
Meigs County and surrounding coUDties as well are far above the ·
national average.
Now,.when we speak of tax cuts,
please let the cut help the working
class as well as for the big oil companies and business.
lf they cut taxes 10 percent over
the next three years as was tried in
1928 through 1932 it would end in the
same result as it did in 1929 (a
Depression) . I lived through this
period and I certainly would hate to
see the same thing happen again. l
can tell you it was not a pleasant
time for the people of this great
country of ours.
·
I think a cut in taxes is fine as long
as our President and Congress are
realistic about it - maybe five percent o,r less over a three to five year
period and to benefit all.
Yours truly. - James McHaffie,
Rt. I, Portland, Ohio 45770.

:Proud of heritage
What do the Ku Klux Klan,
Ayatollah Khomeini, Jim Jones, ncoNazis, polygamists, faith healers,
and Bible believers all have in com:mon? According to the media, they
are all Fundamentalists.
Personally, I am outraged at this

libelous attempt at character
assassination by association. For
the record, Fundamentalism is the
literal exposition of all the affirmations and attitudes of the Bible
and the military exposure ol all noDbiblical affirmations and attitudes.
Biblical Fundamentalism has
nothing to do with apostates, perverts, or Chartsmaticism. Linking
Fundamentalist Christian to lhe
Klan or any other elrtremist group
has the same logical appeal as
Begin's inviting Arafat to a barmitzvah, it's ridiculous!
Originally "Fundamentalist" was
a term of derision placed on those
who believed in taking the Bible
literallY by those who had departed
from the moorings of Biblical
Christianity. · These theological
liberals gained ascendancy in the
" 20s" and "30s" and together with
their political counterparts have
used the media from that time until
the present to carry on their smear
campaign against the conservative
elements in this nation, and so it
goes today.
The heritage of Fundamentalism
is a history of men and women, who
regardless of personal loss, have
maintained their allegiance to
Christ and His Holy Word and have
"contended for the faith once
delivered to the saints" (Jude 3) . Accusations of being " narrow·
minded," udivisive," "hateful," and
"stupid" have not swayed folks of
character and conviction when their
position is right and true.
l am a Fundamentalist and as
such, I am proud of my heritage. It
is comforting to know men like C. H.
Spurgeon, D. L. Moody, R. A.
Torrey, and Billy Sunday held this
timeless positon.
Cordially. - Rev. Alan Blackwood, Pastor, Calvary Bible Church.

Berry's World

r:J

1111 by lEA. 1f'IC

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Today in history.
.I

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Today is Tuesday, March 17, the 76th day of 1981. There are289 days left
intheyear.
·
' Today' a highlight in history:
On March 17, 1962, the Soviet Union accused the United States of
fighting an "undeclared war" in Vielllam and demanded the removal of
U.S. forces.
On this date:
In 1649, England's parliament abolished the House of Lords .

•

NEW YORK (AP) - The line het·
ween sports and business grows fuzzier by the day, with business
borrowing the suspense, glamour
and drama of games, and athletics
getting into in multimillion dollar
deals.
Malcolm Baldrige, the new Commerce Secretary and former chairman of Scovill Inc., is off riding in
the rodeo, while AJ Kaline, the former baseball star, endorses U.S.
News' sound economic reporting.
George Steinbrenner, who runs
the New York Yankees, assembles
teams with dollars and imagination,
buying the best available talent with
the yield produced by earlier purchases, a technique similar to that
used by Charles Bluhdorn, who
assembled Gulf &amp; Western into a
conglomerate by using' the assets ol
old acquisitions to buy up sti
ll more companies.

WASIDNGTON (AP) - CoDservatives launching a long shot attempt to unseat sen. Edward M.
Kennedy in Massachusetts next year
are looking for a candidate - with a
help-wanted ad.
They certainly can't promise applicants a job with a future . Kennedy
has won four Senate elections in a
succession of landslides.
The Kennedy name may not have
been magic in the presidential
primary elections, but even

.. c

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The goals and the flair for
publicity are similar in sports and
business. The news, especially
during baseball spring training,
sounds the same. Dollar signs
abound. So do tales of sharp ,
bargaining, strikes, wage demands,
profits, losses, and benefits.
Does David Mahoney, chairman of
Norton Simon, Inc., deserve annual
compensation of $2 million or so?
How about Rick Burleson of the
California Angels; is he worth $4.2
million over a six-year period'
Will Nolan Ryan's arm strike out
300 batters this year? Will Joe Granville's stock forecasts be accurate' .
Will the weaker baseball teams sur·
vive financially ' How about
Chrysler and American Motors?
Will a certain group win control of
the Philadelphia Phillies? Will
Seagram &amp; Sons succeed in its bid to
acquire St. Joe Minerals Corp. ? Will

Republicans admit it stiU is In
Massachusetts.
But this time, he is atop the con'!llrvative hit list for 1982. The campaign already is under way, with letters like the one that accuses Kennedy of "leading the pro-Hanoi forces in the United States."
Kennedy managers anticipate a
bitter and probably well-financed
conservative offensive, begiMing In
the Democratic primary nelrt year
and escalating in the fall.

!

baseball attendance bti up this year '
What about retail sales?
Perhaps it is only because of the
season, but the sports and l&gt;usiness
pages seem alike, and statistics
have a lot to do with it.
Statistics have long fascinated
baseball fans, but have you noticed
some of the numbers they've been
playing around with in business
lately ? Like M3, interest rate to
price ratios, taxation to productivity
equations and the like. Are they
more meaningful than batting
averages, runs batted in, earned run
averages ?
' It's hard to say, but there is at
least a suggestion that averages in
sports are more to the point. Sports
statistics pin blame. More so than in
business, they deal with mdividuals.
A pitcher's earned run average,
for example, can make or break

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and management can use it as a
basis for trading him. When he joins
another team, so do his statistics.
There is nothing comparable for a
business executive, and perhaps as a
result there are instances of ineffectual but somehow impressive
executives shifting companies at
ever higher salaries.
In fact, because their numbers
aren 't personalized, many an
executive is at this moment on a
business tour of the southland,
where by mere coincidence the
baseball teams are holding spring
training camps.
.
You may not be able to identify
him there in the stands because of
that one great remaining
dissimilarity between executives
and ballplayers.
Ballplayers wear numbers,
executives do not.

So they'r6starting early, too. John
Leslie, who has been a special
assistant to Kennedy, will be
managing the campaign.
Leslie said the organization and
fund-raising phase of the campaign
was launched earlier than before, in
part because of the conservative
challenge. ·The New Right was a
potent force against such liberal
losers as Frank Church and George
McGovern in the 1980 elections that
put Republicans in control of the

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Kennedy said long ago he would be
nmnlng for re-election, and reaffirmed his plans after announcing
Jan. 19 that he and his wife will seek
a divorce.
He dismisses talk about another
presidential bid In 1984 as
premature. The 1982 election In
Massachusetts comes first.
Kennedy says the 1980 coDservative tactics won't work In his
state.

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" Because the Russians don't want
the Bronx."
~&gt; How come?"
''They've seen it on television."
"That's why I want you to sign the
petition, man. If we can change the
name of the Bronx to El Salvador,
maybe they'll want it, and then we'll
get some of that money they're
throwing at the people down there."
" I don't believe the Russians can
be that easily fooled."
'''[know they can' t, but I figure the
people in Washington can be. Hell, I
don't think there's a dozen people In
the capital who know where El
Salvador is."

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"I think you would be better olf,
instead of changing your name to
another country, if you changed it to
a new weapons system," l said.
" What are you talkin~about?"
''If you called the Brpnx 'the MX
Missile System,' I could get you $30
billion, with no questions asked.

"That's a lousy name for a
borough."
"It doesn't matter. The only real
money that's going to be spent in this
country for the next four years Is
going to be for annam~nts. If you
have a sexy military name, you'll
get all the money you want. "

"Do we have to put the system In

the Bronx?''
"It would be nice lf you did.
Everyone wants the U. S. to have an
MX system, but no one wants It tn
their own back yard. If the Bronx offered to put it there, the military
would be very grateful to you, and
reward you handsomely."
"So you think that's a better deal
than changing your name to El
Salvador?"
"I really do," I told him. "Giving
El Salvador $100 million would be a
ortMhot thing. But they're going to
have to pour money into an MX
missile system forever.''

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"We got more than that in the
A man stopped me on the street in
Bronx.
It's safer to walk in the
Manhattan the other day and asked
jungles
of
El Salvador at night than
me to sign a petition.
.
it
is
in
the
parks
of the Bronx."
"What's it for?" I asked him.
"But
your
people
get your arms
"We want to change the name of
right
here
in
the
United
States. The
the Bronx to El Salvador."
guerrillas
in
El
Salvador
are being
"Why ElSalvador?"
supplied
by
the
Russians
and the
"We figure if we change our name
Cubans.
That's
why
we're
giving
El
we can get as much econpmic aid as
Salvador
aid
and
taking
it
away
El Salvador is getting. We worked it
out that what Reagan is cutting out from you."
of the budget for the Bronx comes to
" I'm not too sure l follow that,"
exactly what he is putting into El
the man said. " You mean just
Salvador."
''My goodman,'' I said, ''you can't because our guerrillas in the Bronx
can get any arms they want, right in
compare El Salvador to the Bronx."
"You ever been there?" the man this country, we' re not entitled to
American aid? ".
asked .
"That's correct. The $100 million
"To El Salvador?"
"No, to the Bronx. We're the same is not aid for El Salvador, but a
size as El Salvador and we got as message to Russia and Cuba to keep
their hands off Central America."
many problems as they do. ''
"Well, why can't the people in
" But, sir," I said, trying not to get
the man angry . "El Salvador is Washington give us $100 million so it
being threatened by 10,000 will be a message to the Soviets to
keep their hands olfthe Bronx?"
guerrillas."

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" Poor devil! He just learned that THE JAPA NESE are set to market POWDERED whiskey! "

.....

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

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fectly in tune with the cater.+auling three years. The younger boy, 13,
chorus. If your taste opts to sold Collier's and the Saturday
demagoguery of the very first r.hop, Evening Post so vigorously that he
earned enough to get through law
feast your eyes.
school.
The mother worked nine
All right. I dare say that r:.e of
hours
a
day
in a book store at 25 cell- 1
us on the conservative sid have
ts
an
hour.
The
whole family sort of
done our own demagogging o. We
doubled
up
in grandmother's
have a way, on our side, },citing
rooming
house.
By any current
welfare queens as I pica!
definition,
they
were
truly needy.
beneficiaries &lt;t public
elfare
There
wasn't
any
Medicaid then.
programs. We have rev led in
There
wasn't
any
Section
8 housing
horror stories of grants un?er the
,Comprehensive Employment and
Training Act. We have pounced upon
occasional true tales of fat cats on
food stamps and con artist!( on the
take. Our eKlllllples may haye been
as distorted in one direction as the
liberals' examples in the othik.
· Afair picture of our federal social
programs lies somewhere in between. Most ol the benefici~ries of
food stamps, school l~nches,
Medicaid services, black lung
payments, housing subsidies and the
like are truly needy. But Mr. Reagan
is most certainly right when he insists that many beneficiaries cannot
truly be so classified. Here he would
cut expenditures - and why not?
"'-., ::.P'"""._•
Let me pose a rhetorical question.
I was born in 1920. . How did our

....

.

Pag-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .
Tuesday, Mucll17,1981

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The Dally

Se~~tlnei-Pap-7

Reds' Brown now pitcher. not thrower

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•. SAFE AT HOM I;: ~ St. Louia.Cardinal Randy Thomas scores ai' a
poor throw gets away from Pittsburgh Pirate catcher Ed Ott during Moo\l_ay'a exblbltion game won by the Pirates 7-3. Thomas scored from
"""ood bltse on a single by pitcher John MarUn.

...

Cincy outlasis Astros, 12-10
COCOA, Fla. (AP) - The Cinci!1J111ti Reds route.d Nolan Ryan
wi~ 10 runs in two innings Monday
and then held on for a 12-10
ellhibition victory over the Houston
Aatros.
Ron Oester, Ken Griffey, and Nick
NO STRIKE FORESEEN
, PHOENIX, Am. (AP~- Baseball
Commlulooer Bowie Kulm said he
does uot llllDt there will be a player
tMriR lbll year.
Kuhn, Ia Arizona to visit spriagtl'lllulq cau~.., l&amp;ld Monday wblle
ftleblq the Sla Franclse~aUie
PJne at Pboenii Municipal Stadium
tbat be doesn't tonstder the current
tmpane over free-agent com·
pe~~~~Uon to be a serious threat to
be thtnkll owners and
• · playen will be able to gel together,
Kllba replied: "My tummy leila me

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so.''

Esasky had home runs for the reds.
Oester's homer gave Cincinnati a
2.{1 lead in the first inning and the
Reds then chased Ryan with eight
rWIS in the second with the big blow
coming on Griffey's three-run
homer.
Jose Cruz homered for Houston
and teammates Joe Pittman, Scott
Loucks, and Luis Pujols each had
three hits.

By the time Brown reported to the
'!be euy-going Brown .said be
Reds fann team at Billings in 19'15, won't be crushed If he doesn't make
what he. lulew about the art of pit- the Reds this y~.
ching could fit in a restn bag.
"I jllll Uve life day to day, the
It wasn't until his first minor right way. Baseball is not life to
league game that Brown became me," he said. "Sure, I want to make
aware of a certain illegal manuever it. I didn't put six yean in for
known 88 the balk.
nothing. I want to make It 88 bad as
"I had no idea what I was doing," the next guy.
he said of his pitching debut. "I
"But what do I do If I don't - blow
balked three or fow times in a row. I !llY brains out? I'll go home and
didn't know what a balk was."
work on the railroad, making $30,000
He quickly learned the fine points a year. Of course, you have to work
of mound protocol, and enemy bat· at that."
ters learned why the Reds drafted
him.
untamed
fastball
many His
a petrified
hitter
to the sent
dirt
while making their peace with the
Almighty.
"I could throw it through a wall, if
I could hit the wall," Brown said.
"But I couldn't hit it. That batter
would get up there and all he wanted
to do was getoutofthere."
A few coaching lessons, and
Brown caught on quickly. He harnessed his fastball, posting a 1.31
earned run average with Tampa in
19'18. His 2.40 ERA mark at Nashville got him a promotion to the
Class AAA Indianapolis teain last
year.
''Now I've got to make the hardest
trip of all- triple-A to the majors,"
Brown said.

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~TER ' Send I&lt;1&lt;1Hu to The Dally ·
SenUnel, 111 Court St., POI"'leroy, Ohio ~76&amp; .

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8lJit8CRIPTION RATES
By C.rrler or M;OIOI' Rou.~

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One week ... ... . " .' .... "" " .".' 11.00
'One Moolh ......................... 14.10
j)ne Year . ........................ S$2..,

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No su.blcrtptJons by mall permittat in tow!\!
home carrier servlct lJ 11\IMI\able.

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let the 1nsurance
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tor the
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When is a coal company not a coal
company?
When it's also into trucking, farm- ,....,.lio....']
ing and mine supply.
They're all parts of the Bow·
man family businesses, each with
its own phone system. But they ·
-outgrew these systems, and
asked the General Telephone
Communications Consultant for
help. We suggested a GTD·
120C computer-controlled sys·
tern.
"Without Communications Consult·
ant Esther Klinebriel, we wouldn't have
known what was available to save us time and
money," said Mr. Bowman. "Our new phone syste~ handles calls for
all four companies. Yet each gets its own phone btlls for accountmg
purposes. The night-answer feature is very
· important. Now we get after-hours calls at
home- these are almost always very important calls."
.
Our Communications Consultants
have only one job; to make your telecommunications better and better.
We have what you need.

H&amp;A BLOCM'

Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph. 992-3795

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

~nd

&amp; Brown St.
Mason, W. Va.
Ph .' 773·9128

Open Tues., Thurs. &amp; Sat,
91o 6

APPOI
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POMEROYPh.HOME
&amp; AUTd
992·2094
Pomeroy, Oh.

606 E. Main

systems
big

618 E. Main St.

t -5511.

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If you know about amendi~g a tax ~etum. ro,u
probably know 111&lt;: a~wcr . II you don 1. maybe you
need H&amp;R Block. lk&lt;'liUSC II&amp;R Block knows lax
laws thai you ml!lhl no1 know. You can
·
amt'nd a 1ax re1un1 for ovcrl&lt;~&gt;kcd dcdtK1lons'and
t•rcdils up1o thrn· years alkr tht· filing deadline .
so the an.~wcr w lhc 'flll'Stiun is FALSE.

Open t 1.m.-6 p.m . weekdays

SEE OUR SAWS!

·•we were looking for veteran 1---------------------~~---L---------..:....-------------­
people to be on our bench that could r
hit," Wagner said.
Biittner, one of the leading pinchhitters in the league the last three
seasons, was fretting over free agen·
cy. The 33-year-old left-handed hit·
ter said he wanted to say in Chicago,
but contract talks with the Cubs
soured.
He chose free agency. The Reds,
the Pittsburgh Pirates and the San
Francisco Giants chose him .
"He is a hard-nosed, aggressive
fellow, and he likes to play the game.
He is a good person and a good
citizen," Wagner said. "He understands what his role is."
That role is to pinch hit and OC·
-PhU Bowm&amp;D, VIce Pre•ldeat, Waterloo Coal Co., Oak BW
casionally fill In for a starter.
"You've got to look at this club

WE'LL MAKE THE TAX LAWS WORK FOR YOU

...

992·6687

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te~'t':,;t's how the Reds and the fo.r-

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214 Main St.
Pomeory, Oh.

_sa~id

D True D False

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TAMPA, Fla. ·(AP) _ The Cin- and say realistically I'm not going to
Biittner, who signed a three-year
cinnati Reds needed a dependable, move out a George Foster, a Ken contract with Cincinnati. "I was
proven pinch-hitter. Larry Biittner r...:G::n:.:'':'e::y:....::or.:...:a:..:D..:a..:n_D:.n_·esse--_n_:.''_
__a_w_a_r_e_of_w_ha_t_th_e.;_y_w_:a_nt_ed_.----1
needed to make a move to another

$

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Make
Insurance
Part of Your Plans.

Reds' Biittner thrilled
with change in scenery

It Is too late
to claim a deduction or
credit overlooked on a
1~77 tax return.

uo

I,

PLANNING FOR THE FUTURE?

E

OCD

r.~;;j!!iii!!!i!iiiii\rii

r-p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;J~~~~~~~~~~~

"':::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::, . mer Chicago CUb got together. And
two weeks into spring training, the
Reds' first·ever free agent
acquisition says he's thrilled by the
The Daily Sentinel
change of scenery.
IUSPSI.._. . I
ADhla... efMultbned.la, lnc.
"With the Cubs, the goal was,
hopefully,
to finish the season at .500
PubUahed ever)' arternoon e~tcept Sunday,
ondoy lhrolo&amp;h Frldoy, Ill Cour\Streel, by
- here, it's to win,'' Biittner said.
otio Vapey Publishintc Coml)lny •
"You can see the difference in the
umedia, Inc., Pomeroy, Qrhio ~781 ,
112-21DI. Second cliP postage pald a1
way these guys play."
hneroy,ONo.
The Reds finished third last
Member: 11lr A.Uocl•t~ Press, Inland 0.1·
season in the National League West.
)y f'lwl Auoclltlon and the Americ•n
When club President Dick Wagner
Newsp~per PUbUanen Aasociltton, National
.Adnrtlalng Repruentatlve, Landing
made his off-season shopping list,
Auotl.ltea, 3101 Euclid Ave., Cleveland,
bench help was among his top
qlllo,tltt~.
priorities.

.,_.,

"

TAMPA, Fla. (AP)- It must be a
fluke, Scott Brown thought. How else
could a major league baseball team
draft a pitcher who admitted he
didn't lulow what he was doing on
the mound?
"I started pitching in 19'18. Before
that, I was just throwing,'' said
Brown, vying for one of 10 spots on
the Cincinnati Reds pitching sll!ff.
"1 didn't know the half of it. But I
could get people out.''
It was the promise of Brown's
strong right ann and not his pitching
prowess that made the husky
Louisianan a fourth-round draft
choice in 19'15.
Raised in the "little bitty old
stwnp town" of DeQuincy, the 11fooH Brown didn't ptay high school
baseball because there was no team
at his school. His sole baseball
training came In a ragged local summer league and in one American
Legion game.
The improbable journey to the
Reds tralntng camp began when a
friend coaxed Brown to attend one of
the Reds tryout CIIJllps.
"That was my freshman year. We
went for the heck of it. Three years
later they drafted me," Brown said.
" We were naive. We didn't know
whllt was going on.
"In order to show that we had good
arms, we threw the ball over the
backstop from center field. Someone
said, 'What the heck are you doing?'
We said we wanted to show we had
good anns."
What Brown lacked in polish, he
made up for in arm strength. He
played outfield in swnmer league
ball, pitching against the tough
teams, "and there was only one of

•

II

•••

�Tuesday, March 17,lt11
l!

'Bye' becomes word

for final goodbyes

SOUTHERN EIGIITH GRADE TEAM - The
eighth grade basketball team at Southern posted a 1~3
~ord under Coach Jim La"Ten&lt;'e this past season.
Pictured are team members !front row, lor), David
Ebersbacb, manager, Kevin Dugan, Sean Riffle, Jon

Clark and Chad Roberts, manager. Back row, Coach
Jbn Lawrence, Scot Schultz, Ralph Fisher, Kevin
Teaford, Alan Crisp, Steve Teaford, Greg Nease, Brian
Connolly. Absent was Chesler Combs. Scol1 Wolfe
photo.

By Associated Press
'' It would seem," Ron Abernathy
observed, " that this year, the word
'bye' is short for 'goodbye."'
Louisiana State's assistant coach
knows whereof he speaks. Eight of
the 16 teams which received first·
round byes waved bye-bye to the
rest of the field in the National
Collegiate Athletic Association tournament by the end of last weekend's
second round.
That included the nation's three
top-ranked teams - DePaul, Oregon
State and Arizona State - leaving
LSU's Tigers, No.4 in the final ·
regular-season poll, the highestranked team still alive heading into
the regional semifinals.
The other teams to receive firstround byes, then leave sooner than
. expected, were UCLA, Wake Forest,
Kentucky , Louisville and Iowa .
Along with IBU, the "bye" teams
still alive are Notre Drune, Virginia,
Tennessee, Illinois, Utah, North
Carolina and Indiana.
"Considering all the other up·
sets," Notre Dame Coach Digger
Phelps said Monday , "we are
awfully happy to be where we are
right now. ''

Thursday night it's Brigham
Young, 24-6, vs. Notre Dame, ZJ-5,

RUNNER·UP - 'Southern's seventh grade
basketball team was runner-up to undefeated Trimble
in the Southern Invitational Tournament. Southern
posted an 8-6 record overall. Front, l·r, Richard
GUbrlde, Jeff Frank, Jay Bostick, Brian Freeman, and

and Virginia, 26-3, vs. Tennessee, 21·
7, in the East Regionals at .Atlanta ;
and Kansas State, 23-11, vs. Illinois,
21-7, and Utah, :1!&gt;4, .vs . North
Carolina, 26-7, in the West at Salt
Lake Ci\y, Utah.
Friday night it's LSU, 29-3, vs.
Arkansas, 24-7 and Wichita State, 256, vs. Kansas, 24-7, in the Midwest in
New Orleans; and St. Joseph's, 24-7,
vs. Boston College, 23-&lt;l, and
Alabama-Birmingham, 23-7, vs. In·
diana, 22-9, in the Mideast at
Bloomin~on, Ind.
Notre Dame has been a giant
killer of sorts dating back to the
1940s. More recently, the Fighting
!rish have halted winning streaks of
28 games by Virginia (this year ), 26
games by DePaul (last year), 29
games by San Francisco (1977), 34
games by South Carolina (1974), and
88 g~mes by UCLA (aiso 1974) .
Now Notre Dame faces the unenviable task of trying to put the clam·
ps on Danny Ainge, BYU's scoring
machine wl\ose 37 points last Saturday helped demolish UCLA's onceawesome Bruins 78-55.
In the schools' only previous
meeting, in New York's Madison
Square Garden Dec. 28, 1956, the

Irish routed the Cougars91~.
"We couldn't have been more impressed with Brigham YOWlll alter
watching them beat UCLA," Phelps
oiaid. "Danny Ainge is a true AllAmerican and the rest of their
players complement him so well.
''They 've got tremendous size up
front, yet they run the fast break as
well as anyone. They look like a lot
of the Olympic teams you see
because they are big and physical.
They beat UCLA at their own game,
and I didn't think anyone could out·
qulck UCLA .
·"We'll have to come out and try to
take charge right away and just
hope that Orlando Woolridge can
help us at least to some extent."
Woolridge, a 6-foot-9 senior forward, is their main man under the
boards, but he 's suffering from a
recurring thigh injury. If he can't
perfonn,!Hi Bill Varner will take his
place. "I don't know whether we'll
be able to count on Orlando or not,"
Phelps said. "We'D keep him out this
week and see how things look Thur·
sday night." Physicians have indicated that only rest - perhaps six
weeks' worth or more - is the only
medicine for Woolridge.

Ryan Oliver. Back row, Coach Jfm Adams, Sean
Grneser, Todd Adams, Mark Jarrell, Tracy Cleland,
David Duffy, Scott Wickline, Wendel Clark, Harold
Roush, Heath Hili, and Kelly Grneser. - Scott Wolfe
photo.

Brown leaving UCLA
LOS ANGELES (AP I -After two
winning seasons at UCLA , . Larry
Brown has been lured back to the
National Basketball Association as
coach of the New Jersey Nets.
He disclosed his decioion to the
Bruins at a closed-door meeting with
them Monday, and although he
would not confirm he was leaving,
two players who asked to remain
anonymous said that was what
Brown told them.
They also said Larry Fanner, a
Bruin assistant basketball coach for
six years and a player.under former
coach John Wooden, would be the
new UCLA head coach.
Nets General Manager Charlie
Theokas confirmed late Monday
night that Brown, a former coach of
the Denver Nuggets, had signed to
coach the team starting next season.
Theokas, in an interview with ABC
Radio Sports, said: "We're rea lly

excited about Larry and about next
year. We feel we have half turned
around our program and with the ad·
clition of Larry Brown we feel next
year basketball in New Jersey will
be exciting."
Several players were near tears as
they filed out, one-by-one, from Monday's meeting in Pauley Pavilion.
Freshman center Kenny Fields,
who had been dropped from the
team and then reinstated by Brown,
said: "We hate to see him go. Coach
has a tendency to get real close to his
players. Wherever he goes, I hope he
keeps in touch.''

Brown had been rumored to be
leaving UCLA for the past month,
but said he would wait until after the
Bruins finished the season to make a
decision. Monday's talk with the
team came two days after the club
lost its opening game of the NCAA
tournament.

He becomes the third UCLA head
basketball coach to leave in the past
six years. Following the end of
Wooden 's 27-year reign at the
school, Gene Barlow, Gary Cunningham and Brown each guided the
team for two years.
This season Brown's lOth-ranked
Bruins, who suffered an em·
barrassing 78-~ NCAA playoff loss
to BYU Saturday, finished witiJ a 2().
7 record. In 197~, Brown coached
the team to a second-place finish in
the NCAA tournament and a 22·10
overall record.
Brown, 40, had become the focus
of considerable controversy at
UCLA during the past two months.
The speculation about his going to
New Jersey was never really
quieted. Brown publicly criticized
the school for, among other things,
not allowing enough students easy
access to Bruin basketball games.

NFL owners discuss rule changes
MAUl, Hawaii (API - Changes in
National Football League playing
rules will be proposed today amid
continued conjecture on the suit the
Oakland Raiders and Los Angeles
Colisewn have brought against the
league.
The Competitions Committee
makes the rules report, including
one to Jessen the penalty for pass in·
terference, while the owners are expected to stand fast in their determination not to let the Raiders move
from Oakland.
Conunissioner Pete Rozelle was
asked if he expected a vote on the
Oakland situation after the ballet
went 22~ a year ago. He answered,
"Not unless the .Raiders ask for

one.''
Rozelle said the league expects the
antitrust case will go to trial and
eventually could reach the United
States Supreme Court.
Asked if he would step down if the
Raiders should win the litigation, the
conunissioner answered:
"As long as I enjoy being part of
the league, I will want to stay. If any
circwnstances occur, including per·
sonal, that I don't enjoy it, I will step
down."
·
Rozelle would not enjoy a victory
by the Raiders' managing general
partner Al Davis. Yet he emphasizes
he is only acting for the other 'J:l NFL
team owners in this fight.
"I have a contract that says I en·
force the constitution and by-laws,"
Rozelle said as the league's annual
meeting of its owners began. "That
is what I am doing."
He told the media he saw no out-of·
court settlement in the Raiders case
accusation shorily. The loser is ex·
peeled to appeal.
Asked if a victory by the Raiders

.,

and LA Coliseum in district court
wbuld mean the Raiders would ~e
able to move immediately, the commissioners said that depended on the
jury verdict or what the appeals
court says when it receives it.
He said that a full appeal
procedure probably would take
more than two years.
Rozelle 'based his opinion of no outof-court settlment of the Raiders'
matter on the fact " four corners are

involved."
He named them as the Oakland
Coliseum and Raider fans, AI Davis
and the Raiders, the Los Angeles
Coliseum and fans there and the 27
defendants - meaning the other
NFL owners.
Tile Los Angeles Coliseum seeks a
re 1 cement for the Los Angeles
Rams who moved to Anaheim in ad·
jacenl Orange County starling with
the 1980 season.

Meigs boxers in.good show
The Meigs Jaycee Boxing Club
traveled to Coshocton this past
weekend to parlicipate in an eight
club match at the National Guard
Armory.
Meigs' powerful 165 pound Roger
Cottrell won his match in the second
round by a TKO and subsequently
was named the best overall boxer
for the meet.
Overall, Meigs went seven for 12
bouts as follows :
Brian Korn ·of Meigs defeated
Gary Offman. Glouster, in the 80
pound class; Brian Willis, Meigs,
defeated Gary Ricky Hatcher,
Ripley, the current West Virginia
and Kentucky state champion in the
85 pounds class.
James Acree, Meigs, won over
Rick Rover of Coshocton in the 115
pounds class; Brian Nitz, Meigs,
defeated Bryan Ferrell, Coshocton,
in the 110 pounds class.
In other action, Scott Neigler,
~igs lost ttis first match ever to
Troy Gotarddi, Coshocton, 70 pounds
class in a close contest and Brian
Tannehill, Meigs, lost to J. J . John·
son, Coshocton, 90 pounds rlass in a
holly contested bout.

•

Brian Hicks, Meigs, lost to Tom
Darr, Coshocton, in the 125 pounds
class. Randy Stewart, Meigs,
defeated Dale Maxwell, Zanesville,
in the 147 pounds class. Charlie Whit·
t1ngton defeated Max Dixon ,
Glouster, in the 140 pounds class.
Chris Alien, Meigs, lost to Tim Flet·
cher, Coshocton, in the 170 class.
Willie Donohue, Meigs, lost to Greg
Caudill, Coshocton, in the 160 class.
Others clubs participating were
Athens, Crooksville and McArthur.
Three of Meigs' outstanding
boxers will travel to Cincinnati as
regional champs to participate in
the State Golden Gloves finals. They
are James Acree, Randy Stewart
and Charlie Whittington.
The Meigs Boxing Club located in
the old Sauvage Building on W. Main
St., Pomeroy, is open Tuesday and
Thursday evening fHl and Satul'day
4-6. Meigs boxers have been consistent winners the last few years
and continue to dominate their opponents throughout the area . The
club is serving approximately 40
Meigs County youth and Is sponsored by the Meigs Cow1ty J .C. 'a.

WestVirginia dumpsTemple

Big 10 looms
big in l~IT
By Associated Press
The Big Ten is looming bigger
every day in the National Invitation
Tournament.
On the verge of tloe quarter-finals,
Minnesota, Purdue and Michigan
are aU . still standing tall - and
looking pretty healthy at that, according to their latest victims.
"That team was ~9 in the Big Ten
- and it gives you an idea of how
they play basketball in the Big Ten,"
said Connecticut Coach Dom Perno
alter suffering an 84-66 humiliation
at home to the Gophers Monday
night.
"They got inside people, they got
outside people, they h.ave seven
quality players and will be tough to
beat in the NIT."
So will Purdue, which beat Dayton
50-46 in another second-round game
Monday night.
"They just manhandled us on t~e
boards," said Dayton Coach Don
Donoher. " II was a case of finesse ."
Those games were two of seven
played Monday night as the NIT
field dwindled to eight te!'ms.
Elsewhere, Syracuse whipped Holy
Cross 77-&lt;J7; Duke stopped Alabama
75-70; South Alabama nipped
Georgia 73-72; West Virginia edged
Temple 77-76 in overtime and Tulsa
downed Texas·El Paso 72-67.
Michigan scored a runaway 80-68
victory over Toledo in the only NIT
game played Sunday night.
The results set up the following
quarter-final pairings: Michigan at
Syracuse and West Virginia at Minnesota on Thursday night and Duke
at Purdue and South Alabama at
Tulsa Friday night.
Trent Tucker, hitting 14 of 17 shots
from the field, scored a career-high
35 points as Minnesota rolled past
Connectic ut.
Seven-loot-two
sophomore center Randy Breuer ad·
ded 19 points for the Gophers, 16 in
the second half when the Big Ten
team pulled away from a tight 37·33
lead at intermission.
''I £ell I couldn 1t miss," said
Tucker. "Our team is oriented to the
big guy (Breuer), but I had the
rhytlun, and the coach told rne to put

minutes of overtime to lift West
. Virginia to a 7'1·76 victory over·Tem·
pie in a National Invitation Tournament thriller Monday night.

Sophomore guard Diego McCoy
scored West Virginia's first five
points of overtime after Temple's
Alton McCullough missed a 1f&gt;.foot
jwnper with 2 seconds left in
regulation that would have won the'
game.
The Mountaineers led 7~ before
Neal Robinson knocked in a long
jumper to bring Temple to within
two at 711'68. Robinson led the 21}.3
Owls with a game-high 24 points.
Hosey and Russel Todd each made
one of two free throw attempts to
push the Mountaineers' lead back to
four. After two free throws and a
layup by Temple's Ron W~ter and a
tap-in by Todd, Gipson made one of

,r:-:,- -

_.t~

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP I - linda View, 5-4 Toni Roesch of Columbus
Krider couldn't lead her team to the Hartley and fHi Miriam Banks of
state tournament, but she has Dayton Dunbar.
All are seniors except Mast and
reaped nearly every individual
Roesch,
both juniors.
award in Ohio Class AA high school
Named
to the second team were
girls basketball.
Pam
Mack
of Cincinnati Madeira,
The :&gt;-foot~ senior frm1 Easton ·
Lauren
Triplett
of Ironton, Sue
Canton was a four-time selection as
All-Stark County, made the Class A Camp of Swanton, Sarah Evans of
All-Ohio first learn as a junior and Gallipolis, Margaret Peters of Can·
now has earned The Associated ton Central Catholic, Jenny Gilligan,
Press Class .AA State Player of the Cincinnati Reading, Patty McClure
Year title and a spot on the Class AA
all-state first unit.
Still, her team could not reach the
state semifinals, reaching the
COLUMBUS, Ohio jA PI ..--- The A~1 (l(;i ·
regional tournaments three straight att.'f.l
Presl( 1911 1 Cia ~ M AII-Qhih h! h
se houl l(!rls baskulOOU ~lt..'t'tiOns, lllll~c
years.
lht!
rectllnmcndatlun!
of
l'Ollel(e
Krider scored 1,931 points in four on
Cllm.: hc:~ und statewide panel 11f .5puri.!
seasons, reaching double figures in writers 11nd broadco.5tcrs:
FIRST TEAM
84 consecutive games. She carried a
l.irld.t Krider, Ea11t Cltntun. :,.rout_. Sr.,
23-poinl average as a senior this win· 2.1.0 pu!nt.'l per I(Hnle; Kris Watl , lluron
fi..foot Sr., 22.3; J~.Htrme lnem11n Olrruted
ter.
F'alls, $-7 Jr .. 34.2: Molly McG~alh, ClnThe All-Ohio selections are made dnnatt Wy ornlng, &amp;-foot Sr , ?A.O; Becky
~richsvillc Ch1yrmmt , 11-J
~- •
with the recommendations of a lllllyer,
14.7; Carohne Mast. WKrsHW Hiver View
statewide panel of sports writer.; 6--11 Jr.. 19.3; Tun! Rtlf!JCh, Colwnbu.i
ll~~ortley, H Jr., Z3.J: Hnd Mlrhun B11nkJ
and broadcasters and college D11yton
l&gt;unbHr, .&gt;-6 Sr., 11.0.
'
SECOND TJo~ AM
recruiters.
Pa111 Muck. Cincmna tl Madeira~ , S.Y Sr.,
Joanne Ineman of O~nsted Falls
22.0; I.Huren TnpleU . rrontun,:;.8 Sr., 22.0;
the stale's Class AA girls scoring Sue Cump, Sw.11nton, 5-6 Sr., 21.0 ; ~ruh
tL'I, fiHihpol\s, 6-1 J r. 22.4; M11rgaret
champion this winter, joinl'\1 Krider f:va
h· l~rll , CHIIhln Central Calhollc &gt;5 Sr
on the first team all-state. The 5·7 17 3; .IPnny filllil(an, Clnclnl\itU R~adlnfl , ~
Jr , 17 n. P11 tt y M&lt;•Ciure, Blnorn·Cnrrull
junior averaged 34.2 points to move 5-11
Sr . . 210: uml Amy l!rulcher ~ :
varrt• Fm rlc~s. fMI Sr ., 17.1.
'
up from the t980 All-Ohio third un it.
THIKOTEAM
Their teammates on the eightIJc~ il'ce Willl.lim.'l, Sl. Purtd (;nthum 6-1
player first squad were 6-foot Kris Sr., l ~Ui; Jo Ann Korctuu.k CamPbel l
5-8 Sr., 19.0: l.orl ' l.ar~ollette
Watt of Huron, 6-foot Molly McGrath Memorial,
&amp;!lhwu~. .&gt;11 ~. . 22 .1; N.illf.'Y Be1dty:
of Cincinnati WyomJng, 6-1 Becky ~~NMw Htver VIew , $.10 Sr., 13.3; Cheryl
,, G11rficld Hcit{hl..'i Tr!naty, ~ Jr ..
Hillyer of Uhrichsville Claymont. :;. Sl.!trt!rt
26 4; I arloUu llavis, Younwstown flayen
II Caruline Mast of Warsaw River S-10 Sr., 18.0: Dt!bbm l.dner M.rir~

of Bloom-Carroll and Amy Bratcher
of Navarre Fairless.
Third team selections included
Desiree Williams of St. Paris
Graham, JoAnn Korchnllk of Campbell Memorial, Lori LaFollette of
Bellevue, Nancy Beatty of Warsaw
River View, Cheryl Seller! of Gar·
field Heights Trinity, Carlotta Davis
of Youn!!"town Rayen, Debbie Lei·
fler of Marion Pleasant a~d Kim
Horodyski of Kinsman Badger.

1981 Class AA.All-Ohio Girls Team

Pl~~~nt, ~ .lr., 19.8; Jnd Kim

"

Hor~

(lyski, Kil\'ltnan Ba!hcer, S-10 Sr., 11.1 1

PI .A VEH OF YEAR I Jnda Krider,
F..asl Caltl!m.
HONORABLE MENTION
Mindy Majn, Canfield : teres11 Kastor,
Uhrichsvil le Claymont; Janet GlaW.tone,
Welt !•fayette Ridgewood; l.t. M•nnl n~~t. Toronto; Cbtryl Madden, Wcat MuekinJ(um ; U.ffie Geyer , Ptulo; Otnlae
Slay. Weal I&gt;Miayettt RldM:ewood; Ott
Greenwood, C011hocton ; P1lty l.enMfl
Dover; Krloly De!IIIPilO, Welll,lllo: PatiJ
Bellville Clear
Fork;
J1cq11e
. l,.uers,
Strt~hley . P1ulding;
Denlne Blrtcher, NapoletJJl : J1n Harvey. Oak l-llrbor; Yvette
HMu, Nonnlk : Usa BradJey, lJml
Bath ; J011n Wennln11. Coklwaler; Kathy
Stlnehart, Otsego; Sherry Cukn, Dayton
Dunbiln Br~nda Dillon. Proctorville f"1lr·
l.Hnd ;

Mil1:i Howard , South Pulnt ; Stephanie
A.ull.ll. Bellefontalno!; rxana Rrumballllh,
WeMt MUion Milton-Union : l.ucindl Tulll1,
St . Purls Graham: Mlchello! Po!nsy~ Urbilna ; Cheryl Curry, Jamestown ureeneview ; Jane Phend, Chagri n F1ll.'l ~ Beckr.
Brunune, Rocky River Lutheran Welt; [ •
Hnu1 Trl!vlno, l.oraln BJ'OOiuNdt; Anneue
Walkt,lr. Oberlin; 1..- Tiller, Colurnbul
Hamillon Twp.; CPery l MeN,eal, London;
Dawn Pemberton, Heath ; Lori Fl'llnce.
co n, Cu lumbua DeSIIn: MoUy
MCC.ut~he)' , Sunbury Big W•lnut ; Mart-.
lyn
Gamble, M.rton
tilgln; Tammy
Crawford, Colwnbllll Wehrle; Shirl Stoney, Gallipolis; Nancy Enna, Ga!llpol11.

CINCINNATI - Cincinnati Reds'
ticket agencies will open for
business this Friday (Murch 20) for
all 1981 home games at Riverfront
Stadium. There are more than 5C
branch ticket outlets all over Reds'
Country to make it convenient for
Reds' fans to purchase tickets.
Nine of these ticket agencies will
have tickets on hand for all games at
Riverfront Stadiwn this season.
They are the 580 Gift Shop in downtown Cincinnati; Rike's downtown
store and Dayton Mall In Dayton;
the Central Ticket Offk~ in Colum·
bus; and the five Sears

~Lares

In In·

diana polls.
· Fans may still purchase $6 and $4
tickets for Opening Day, April 8, at
the Riverfront Stadium ticket office
or by mall by writing to : Cincinnati
Reds, P. 0. Box 1970, Cincinnati, Oh
45201.

"

I

•

:

Office Located On
Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio

•••
••
,
•
•
••
,

OFFICE HOURS
MON. &amp; TUES.
9 to 11 and 1 to 5

Parental concern is nice if you're
a little girl in pigtails and ribbons
but, if you're over 21 and an in·
dependent-minded multimlllionaire,
it can be a drag.
Martina Navratilova found it so
when her parents and little sister
moved in on her last year and· took
much of her attention away from
tennis, which is her livelih took
much of her attention away from
tennis, which is her livelihood.

•
••

••
••

9 to 11 and 1 to 5

.:

PH. 992-6603

•:

Please Call For Appointment

•

FRI.

•
e

••••••••••••••••••

'
IJ,~\,''.,~\,'.q~\, ,.,1,\,',\~',\.•~~- ~" ·~
.f
·-""" l'

. ...

--

'')"'

,,,

.~""

-

-

-

-iii :.

......

--

-~~-

• Compact lnlegrated
Design With Built-In 12"
Monitor Fils Easily on a
Desktop
• Over 80 Ready-to-Run
Programs lo Choose
From, Or Write Your Own
Programs For Business &amp;
Personal Use
• Easy Internal Expansion
48K and 2 Disk Drives
• The Per1ect Starter
Computer That Grows
with Your Needs

- - .- ~

sggg

From

RADIO SHACK HAS OTHER TRS-80 COMPUTERS
TO FIT EVERYONE'S NEEDS FROM $249. TO $10,000.
AVAILABLE ONLY AT RADIO SHACK STORES, COMPUTER CENTERS
AND DEALERS . CHECK YOUR LOCAL PHONE BOOK FOR LISTINGS.
~JRPORAfi()N

f'llll I"&gt; MAY VAW• AI INDII...IliJAl ',l(JH!:..

,,GUESS WHAT YOU
CAN EATON
THE NEW1981

WEIGHT WATCHERS®

Flonne Mark.

FOOD PLANS:'

IJ•N I&lt;P ntYi•'lllN

w.u cn~r) •r\l no~ ~~ ~ ,,

BEER

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w11, 0

Ye s

No

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Y&amp;~

Pu.,m11 Bu1te1

Anvonc who has troubl e hearing Is welcome 10 have a hearing t es t us·
ing modern e lectronic equ ipment to determine if his loss is one Wh ic h
may be he lped. Some of the ca uses of hec1rtng loss will be expl ained
and d iagrams of how th e ear works wi ll oe shown .

PHONE 992-3629

Nll •

.

Yn ~

No

Wright Wm c ller s Food Plans
learn to lose we1gt11

Pop001n Yus, a11CO t)omobakedbreRd On lM new

w1llu n l1rTU IS otcoursf! -- and Still

PS You guessed 1t, lhe chocolate cake's S11llll ' no-no

~1499VALUE PACKAGE IF YOU JOIN.NOW!
SAVE $4• on t sl mee11ng and reglstratl()l'l lae betwiten Ma1ch 8 and March 28. 1981
GET 110.91 des•gn er tote bag 1lyou al1end etQhl consecul !IIB paid w~ ly fftllill,ng s
bolween Ap11lS and May 30. 1Q81
•RIIgular1•t meeting •I'd rwglatr.tlon

IN f1:Z. WMIIIIy rNMlng fH ~!I.

GA.LLIPOLIS
51. I..Oull C•lholit Chun;;h

BELlONE Consultant Who Will Be At:
MEIGS INN, POMEROY, OHIO

Cti OC LAYER C AKE
1
Yo'!S
No

HQME AAK ED 6HI--AD

5WH I POT".fO
No

vou can iBtlm to eat 1~10rn n! -

9 AM TO 12 NOON

IF YOU CANNOT COME IN CALL THE HOTEL FOR A HOME APPOINTMENT .

••

TRS-80 MODEL Ill ·

A DIVISION ()f TA.NDY r

THURSDAY,
MARCH 19, 1981

We Also Service and Repair All Makes of Hearing Aids.
Batteries and SuppUes For All Makes For Sale.

•••
••
••

r~~i~==~:=~~!!!!!!!~!~!~~=

have
beenand
different
been well
active.if everybody had
"When I am healthy and able to
apply myself, I can beat any or all of
them," she says with finality. Most
tennis critics agree - this young
Czechoslovakian has all the tools for
greatness.
She has been overpowering in winning .at Cincinnati, Chicago, Los
Angeles and Dallas. She crushed
Jaeger 6-4, 6-0 in Los Angeles and
Pam Shriver 6-2, 6-4 in Dallas.
Martina first came to America as
a 16-year-old in 1973 and fell in love
with the country. During the U.S.
Championships at Forest Hills in
1975, she announced that she plan·
ned to leave her home and family in
Czechoslovakia and seek asylum in
the United States.
Martina Americanized herself im·
mediately. She learned English until
now she speaks Ouentiy. She went
through the jeans and rock craze.
She become an avid Dallas Cowboys
football fan.
Martina has gone through all
procedures fur American citizenship
and is awaiting final word, expected
in the next couple or three months.

HONLY

Will Be Given By
Mr. H. William Mattingly

•

236 W. 2nd, Pomeroy, Oh.
(Formerly Meigs Gen. Hospital)
Office Ph. 992· 6624
Home Ph. 992·3523

,•

ELECTRONIC
HEARING TESTS

••

Steven L. Story and Karen H. Story

By Will Grbruiey
APCorreopondent

Pomeroy, Ohio

•
•
•

WEDS.
•
•,9 to 11, 1 to 5, and 7 to 9~

HEARING TESTS SET

for

•

A nORNEYS AT LAW

INTIMIDATING ~ The basket looks a long way up to forward Ed
Rains (151 of South Alabama Monday as Georgia forward Dominique
Wllldns 121} spars above the basket to hinder the shot in first period aclion of their second round National Invitational Basketball Touroameat
at Athens, Ga. In background Is Georgia's Vern Fleming ( 10), (AP Laserphoto).
.----------------------1

Ticket agencies
open for business

•

EHUNGER . D0

THE OFFICES OF

Sports World

The 24-year-old lelt-hander, twice
winner at Wimbledon and No.I in
world women's rankings in 1978 and
1979, has won four of the six tour·
naments on the Avon winter tour,
losing only two matches, and is the
top-seeded favorite in the climactic
Avon Championships.
Although three of her strongest
rivals - Chris Evert Lloyd, enjoying
a sabbatical with her family; Tracy
Austin, sidelined by a sciatic nerve ,
and young Andrea Jaeger, with a
foot ai~nent _ haven't been fit to
challenge, Martina refuses t•J concede thai her winter's success would

chosen to Class AA team

•

$TORY &amp; STORY

Martina's father, Mirek, mother
Jana and little sister Jana returned
to Prague at the end of last year af·
ter eight months in this country.
America wasn't for them. With
fewer responsibilities, Martina's
tennis game, which had been in the
doldrums, suddenly came to life
again.

Gallipolis' Sarah Evans

'

THE OPENING OF

Today's

" I am not one to cry 'wolf.' I don't
complain when my shoulder hurts .
But it was a troublesome year for
me. I had to take care of them finan·
cially as well as emotionally."

White Sox's Bill Almon on a pickoff attempt in Mooday's exhibition game In St. Peteraburg, Fla. (AP
Laserphoto ).

•

ANNOUNCING

FLYING HIGH- Bobby Dulin of the University of ConoecUcut sans
up with a try lor a basket as Randy Breuer of the University of Minnesota
(45 In dark jersey} puts up an arm to block him during the first hlilf of the
U c....Minneaota basketball game In the second round of play of the
NIT. Watching the play are Corny Thompson oi U Coon (52 In white) and
Tret~t Tucker (32 In dark jersey) of Minnesota. ( AP Laserphoto ).

player ."

Kenny Dennard scored 25 points
and Vince Taylor added 17 as Duke
beat Alabama. Duke held a 61-58
lead late in the second half when
Taylor hit a free throw to extend the
lead to lour. Talyor hit two more
free throws with 2:55 remaining to
give Duke a six-point advantage, 6458.
Later, Alabama pulled to within
two points on a basket by Eddie
Phillips, but that was as close as the
Crilnson Tide got the rest of the way.

rI :... eIJRe e • NORMAN
••• •e•e••~
J •

The victory, West Virginia's 19th
in 20 home games this season, sends
thl: 22..'1 Mountaineers into the quar· ' e
tertinats.
•
Neither West Virginia nor Temple e
was able to open a lead of more than 1
six points in the tight, tensely played :
game.
1

it up." .

Tucker entered the game with a
14.1 average.
"Tucker has been a real good
shooter," said Minnesota Coach Ji!n
Dutcher. "But he just proved him:
self a little more tonight."
Fo.Ward Mike Scearce had three
baskets and two assists in the final
seven minutes to help Purdue beat
Dayton. Dayton was forced to play
most of the game without Mike
Kanieski, its leading scorer and
rebounder for the season. The 6-10
junior center sprained his right
ankle taking a jwnp shot at the 17:02
mark of the first half.
He was sent to the hospital for X·
rays, which were negative, at half·
lime after soaking \he ankle in ice.
Later, he returned to the Flyers'
bench on crutches.
Leo Rautins and Erich Santifer
combined for 41 points to power
Syracuse over Holy Cross.
Rautins, a &amp;-foot..'! sophomore
transfer from Minnesota, scored 21
points and pulled down 10 rebounds.
Santifer finished with 20 points to
help the Orangemen improve their
record to ~11 .
·
The victory was the fifth straight
in postseason play for Syracuse. The
Orangemen had finished with their
worst regular season record In a
decade and were excluded from the
NCAA tournament, despite winning
their own Big East playoffs, for the
first time in nine years.
"He's one of the finest big-man
passers in the country," said Holy
Cross Coach George Blaney of
Rautins. "He's an exceptional

two free throw attempb to give the
Mountaineers a 7:&gt;-72 lead with 26
seconds left.
Robinson closed the margin to one
by hitting another jumper, ·this ana
with 17 seconds left.

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP)
Dennis Hosey and Donnie Gipson
sank crucial free throws in the final

"I love the?" dearly," said the gil·
ted Czechoslovakian defector Mon·
day when she came to New York to
promote the $300,000 Avon Cham·
pionships March 2:&gt;-29 in Madison
Square Garden, "but they were
miserable over here.

GETTING BACK - New York Mets Rick Sweet
slides back safely Into second base under Chicago

The Daily Sentinei-Pape-~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, March 17,1981

9 1 Slt~l il 51

Tuus 6 j(Jpm

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�17 1911

Pa e-10-The Oaily Sentinel

.

.

Steve Hindy traces roots
back to Sultana Taaquob
Middleport, Ohio, told me the
name of Grandfather's village.
Simple curiosity prompted my
visit.
It was not without apprehension that I sought my
roots. Born in ParkersPurg, W.
Va., I have lived a nomadic,
American-style life, half in Ohio
and rest in upstate New York and
New York City.
l was excited, and afraid asAP
Photo Editor Zuhair Saade and I
drove over the bald peaks of the
Lebanese mountains and through
the green fields of the Beqaa
Valley toward Sultana Yaaqoub,
about two hours' drive from
Beirut.
I feared the Lebanese idea of
family would be too demanding,
and I didn't want to get too involved in a country shattered by
a war that pits Moslem against
Moslem and, in some cases,
brother against brother.
My grandfather left Lebanon
for the opportunities of America.
Like millions of immigrants at
the turn of the century, he entered America at Ellis Island in
New York Harbor.
A little man under five feet tal~
he chain-smoked Chesterfields
and had a bristly mustache that
tickled when he kissed me, which
he did frequently - to my embarrassment.
He married an American, had
six children, and died in Ohio in
1971. He read and wrote Arabic
and studied the Moslem holy
book, the Koran, and all his
children became Christians. Hen-

By Sieve Hllldy
Guest LUestyle wrller
In a sense all Americans are
displaced persons. All have their
roots somewhere else.
When Steve Hindy, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Kalad Hindy, formerly
of Middleport,• the Associated
Press' Middle East news editor,
went back to his family village in
Lebanon, Sultana Yaaqoub, he
was full of doubts.
This is his story.
"Hello, Auntie, I'm Steve Hindy, Aly 's grandson from
America ,'' l said in Arabic.
My 86-year-old great-aunt,
gazed at me with uncertainty for
, a moment, then tears .welled up in
her eyes. She looked past me at
one of my new-found cousins, who
said: " He's your brother's grandson from America.''
"Allah!" she wailed. She threw
her wooden cane in the air and
hugged and kissed me . "My
' · brother, Aly, went to America
when l was only one, but you are
surely his grandson. You exude
the scent cif your grandfather.
And thank God you have a

mustache."
Sultana Yaaquob is a quiet Sunni Moslem village of'OOO perched
on a peak in the Anli-Lebanon
Mountains near the Syrian border. My grandfather left his
village to work in the United
States in 1895, when he was 13.
The Associated Press sent me to
. : Beirut in 1979, quite by chance.
· My family had lost all ties lo
· the old country, though my Aunt
Libby (Elizabeth Stumbo) in

teenage ·cousin, Mariam, on a
feast of Lebanese food - all
grown on Hindy land. They asked
me questions about American
television programs they see.
Tala! showed me a World War
ll photograph of my father in his
U. S. Navy uniform and pictures
of my grandfather and uncles and
aunts and cousins in America. We
sat on low couches in the living
room, sipping the first of dozens
of rich, dark Arab coffees I would
have that day.
On a grand tour of the village
with a gaggle of children in tow,
my relatives showed me the stone
ruins of my grandfather's house
and announced it was mine. They
implored me to build a home in
Sultana Yaaqoub.

·The unbuttoned look
in business offices

in 'Who's Who'

men aren't forever businesslike.

How can we ignore sex when they
flaunt it?
l say, if working women want to be
·treated as "persons" they should
dress as conservatively as men. If I
came to the office in gold chains and
a shirt open to the waist, I'd expect
to be sexually harassed by women.
Also fired.
' You ran quite a controversy over
unwantect overtures - from the
female point of view. Now, let a man
·caution: 'Button up and cover up,
. ladies, if you're serious about your

;careers." - ROY
, . .. But don't wear Mother Hubbards!.- HELEN
·NOTE FROM SUE :
: High slits and the low unbuttoned
· look may be stylish but
~ businesswomen who wear them give
, conflicting signals. No wonder
, susceptible men sometimes get con•fused .
· Hold back your super-sexy clothes
: for evening, ladies, all right?

•

' RAP :
Ralph and l had a fight and
; cancelled our wedding three days
before it was to have happened.
We returned shower and early
:. wedding gifts - and then we
• discovered we couldn't live without
~ ~ach other so we eloped to Las
yegas .

We have · an unfurnisht!d apartment and could certainly use all
those household items we returned .
How can be politely let our friends
know we were premature? -EDNA
AND RALPH
DEAR EDNA AND RALPH :
Send our wedding announcements
and hope your friends haven't yet
returned their gifts to stores. - SUE
AND HELEN
P.S.: Butdon'tsayso!
DEAR RAP :
I had a job at a swimming pool last
swruner where I worked with a
great guy named Pete. We're both
18. He's shy and has a hard time
showihg emotion, but due to
women's instinct and a few brave,
generous compliments on his part, l
know he liked me. l don't see him
during the college year because we
live in different towns , but we
recently met at a concert and be
seemed genuinely glad. We talked
more than expected, but still he's
holding back.
How can l break through his
reserve and get a nice relationship
going this swruner at the pool' WVESASHYGUY
DEARLASG :
Be open, friendly, supportive,
slightly aggressive and THERE !
That should do it. Good luck! HELEN
LASG:
In other words, don't wait for Pete
to do the pushing. -SUE

•..

(GOT A PROBLEM? Or a subject
for discussion, tw()ogeneration style?
Direct your questions tq either Sue
or Helen Bottel - or both, if you
want a combination motherdaughter answer - in care of this
newspaper. )

:Gloria Oiler

TOPS queen

: Officers were elected at the recent
. !fleeting of TOPS OH 1466 held at
. Rutland . Elected were Nellie
. ;Haggy, leader; Gloria Oiler, c~
leader; Ruth Shain, secretary; and
' ~ndy Hysell, treasurer. Shorty
Wright is the weight recorder;
: Phyllis Clay, the c~weight recor~er; and Lynda Adkins, the
; corresponding secretary.
• • Final plans were made to attend
; the Area Recognition Day con: : vention in Columbus. A new game,
· ' ;' Let's Shape Up for ARD" was star"ted with points to be given for
·~ various activities. The member
rllaving the most points by April 3
$5.
'·:will
.· Thereceive
inches and pounds contest was
· • concluded and receiving gifts were
' phyllis Clay, Gloria Oiler, and Shor!Y Wright for having lost the most
:' weight in the three divisions. Mrs.
, Oiler was awarded a special gift for
llaving lost the most weight In all
, categories. Shorty Wright received a
,gift certificate from the LaMar
Beauty Salon for losing the most inChes In the group.

Honored as weekly queen was
Mrs. Oiler and she was presented a
dollar and a ribbon with members
singing in her honor. Infonnation on
the meetings may be obtained by
calling 742-3002.

Holzer Clinic LTD is offering a
new class, Preparation for Breastfeeding, to their obstetrical patients.
This class is designed for the mother
who plans to breastfeed her infant
and is interested in learning more
about how to prepare herself for the
nursing experience.
The class will be held Thursday,
March 26,7-9 p.m. at Holzer Medical
Center. Becky Sanders, R.N., will be
in charge of the session, which will
include films on breat preparation,
discussions on breastfeeding and the
working mother, and breastfeeding
after c-section. The fee for this one
class is fl.
.
If you are interested in obtaining
more information. call the Health
Education office at 446-5278 or after
5 p.m. call446-2509.
MEETING CANCELLEO

A meeting of the Rock Springs
Better Health Club scheduled for
Thursday has been cancelled.

Book fair highlights PTO
The annual book fair was the Weber, principal, introduced the
highlight of the March PTO meeting school champion speller, Tr_avis .
held recently at the Riverview Newlun, grade six, who represented
School.
the S&lt;:hool al the county si&gt;elltng bee.
The Eastern High School · Becky Kimes, grade six, was also inlibrarian, and Margaret Cauthorn, troduced as the alternate. A
Riverview librarian, arranged the discussio" was held on the Right·t()o
book fair with parents, Garcia
Rcl!d week recently observed at the
Adams, Betty Dill, Lucille Kimes, school.
Kathy McDaniels, Juanita Medling,
On display at the meeting were arVirginia Newlun, Marlene Putman
ticles recently purchased by
Rosemary Randolph, and Nola' teachers with PTO donations given
Young, assisting. The fair brought in
to classrooms.
$342 in book sales.
The fourth grade won the banner
The unit voted to sponsor the local
and prize for having the highest per·
boy scout troop and made a $25
centage of parents in attendance.
donation to the troop. Mrs. Grace
Refreslunents were served.

•

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241 THIRD AVENUE~

l._!_j

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:IIi
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NEW LOCATION ~

RIO GRANDE - The 1981 edition
of " Who's Who Among Students in
American Universities and
Colleges" will carry the names of 12
students from Rio Grande College
and Community College who have
been selected as being among the
country's most outstanding campus
leaders.
Campus nominating conunitlees
and editors of the annual directory
have included the names of these
students based on their academic
achievement, service to the community, leadership in extracurricular activities and future
potential.
They join group of students selected from more than 1,300 institutions
of higher learning in all 50 states, the
District of Colwnbia and several
foreign nations. Outstanding students have been honored in the annual
directory since it was first published
in 1934.
Students named from this area
from Rio Gcande College and Community College are Kim Grueser,
Minersville, and Jean Ritchhart,
Syracuse .

Breastfeeding
classes locally

~&amp;J

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All ·
Purchases Over
ssooo Additional
10% DISCOUNT
.

too-

rrwsclllar Ieveli. You lhwld do ~
Mardi u~ 1111
well at thinp requlrtn« an&amp;pene. for
Some important ldjustmentl wW be l'll'!de
LEO i JolJII-Aq. f) Elpo&lt;tjiiC
lhi5 coming year in several relatlon.ttUpl
which you deem to be !ITlJI(lrtant. 1brougb . today cOUld lead to_..,~
You'll do OK, tven lhouah I craod lrcftJ1
better understanding you Will gain true alUes
!sn't in the offln&amp;·
.
insteld of lukewarm cohorts.
VUtGO IAq,!Hepl. ZZI ftlaJ
PISCES !Feb...Mor&lt;b •1 Good thlng'
have difficulty today trying to Uto liP witb
should happtn for
today in situations
the briJk pact you set lor yOW'Ielf. Ht Cl' aht
wb!re there art pYrtners involved. What you
moves futett wM IT10'It!l alone.
blck they'll 1\ave, or vice veru.. Find out
U1111A (Sept. ~l Di Ottui~wt
more about what's in stort for you for the
all need 1 tittle time to ounelvet &amp;o
ov
year following your birthday by sending for
bearingsMnd
collectwrthoulfdl. An
or
your Astro-Graph. Ma!J $1 for each to A!ltr~
two of solitude m.a.y prove heiPiultodly.
Gr~ptt, P. 0 . 801 &lt;489, Rlldio City Station,
SCORPIO iO.l U.No•. ZZI Sllarirc New York, N. Y. I0019. Besureto!lpecily birtoday wtth persoN with wtnn you have little
th dale .
In
common wiU be borin&amp;· Jt could ~ be
ARIEl3 'Mirdl Zl·AprU II) Unless you
counterproducUve. Seek d\lnUllkea.
program yourself properly today then's a
SAGmAKnJS !Nov. JS.Dec. Ill v..,
11trong posaibUity you'll not •ork u hard a11
woo't delibera\t!IY se-ek challqe todlly, but
ywshould. Don't ptllllpone duties.
.should you be confronted by it you will ~
TAURUS {Aprti!I-MIIJ 21) You are good

i

. .

Meigs .;.udents

ASTROGRAPH

A spring rummage sale· was planrou
ned at Friday's meeting of the HapPY Harvesters Class of Trinity Church.
·
The sale was set for May, 4, 5and 6
in the church basement. Plans were
also made for serving the Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters
of AmeMca, annual Charter Day din.ner at Trinity Church Friday.
duct yourMlf like 1 winner. Oppoalion
Members enjoyed a sack lunch
at organizing things tDday ~ pro.vlded they'rfl
awakeru~ your aMert!ve qiW.Jtiea,
for
fWl
pW'pO&amp;eil.
Howevl!r,
you
may
not
put
preceding the meeting which was
CAPRICORN ji&gt;«.II-Jaa. II ) 'l'hilahou.id
the same effort into your practical
be a rather enjoyable day, becatue you'rt
opened by Miss Enna . Smith,
requirement.!.
caP,Able of treatins whatever life hal to "'•r
GEMINI 'May !l.Juae !8) Pef3istence
president. Mrs. Caryl Cook ha&lt;l
phih:~~Sophka lly .
w!U be a necessary ingredient today if you
AQUARRJS (Jaa. zt.Fetl. II) Jolnt vendevotions using Isaiah 58, verse 5.
hq)e to be succe!ISful. Make it a point to at·
turei
should be a proflllble aru for you
tempt
only
that
which
you
in
tend
to
COITIShe told of ashes being put on the
today even lhotijth th.lt wh.lch you pin may
plete.
be rrilitor ~\her than monumental. ~very ut.
forehead as a sign-of penance, public
CANCER IJ~~~~r !1-July HI You function
tJt' bit hc.lpll .
beuer
today
oil
the
rrn&gt;nlAl
nither
than
the
confeSsion of sin and a vow to turn
~rom sin. Ashes came from palms
blessed on Palm Sunday the
EMERGENCY RUNS
ANNUAL PARTY
preceding year, sbe said, with Ash
Three calls were answered by
SAnJRDAY
Wednesday marking the beginning local emergency units on Monday,
The annual birthday party of the .
of Lent. Mrs. Cook pointed out that ~ccording to the report of the Meigs
Racine Post 602, American Legion,
repentance acceptable to God in- County Emergency Medical Ser·
will
be held Saturday, 7: 30 p.m. at ·
volves not only turning from
vices. At 1:12 p.m., the Syracuse the Legion hall. Each member Is to ·
something questionable but turning Unit took James Conkle, Condor St.,
take a prize for games. Refreshtowards something better. She read Pomeroy, to O'Bleness Hospital in
" Welcome March" from Sunshine Athens; the Rutland Unit at 8 :02 ments of ice cream, cake and coffee
will be served. Entertainment will :
Magazine and closed with prayer
a.m. took Melissa Gennan, Depot · be provided by dancers from The
stressing positive thinking.
St., to Holzer Medical Center, and
Named as hostesses for the April the same unit at 11 :19 a.m. took Gary Shirley Carpenter Studio.
meeting were Edith Lanning and
Canterbury from Meigs Mine I to
Ella Smith with Genevieve Meinhart
Veterans Me)llorial Hospital.
ART DISPLAY PLANNED
giving devotions. Following the
An
art display by the children will
meeting members went to the World
be
featured
at the Tuesday night ·
Miss
Smith,
Mrs.
Edna
Slu,;her,
Day of . Prayer serVice of Church
meeting
of
the
Middleport PTA, 7
Mrs.
Eva
Dessauer,
Mrs.
Wilma
Women United of Meigs County at
p.m.
At
the
meeting
a vote will be
Terrell,
'Mrs.
Lanning,
Mrs.
Ruth
the Enterprise United Methodist
taken
on
whether
the
organization
Massar,
Mrs.
Meinhart,
and
a
guest,
Church. Attending the Happy Har·
will
remain
PTA
or
change
to Pl'O.
Mrs.
Clara
Thomas.
vesters meeting were Mrs. Cook,

ce my name, Stephen Khaled
Hindy, a Christian first name and
Arabic middle and surnames.
My religion did not matter to
the people of Sultana Yaaqoubto them l was a Hindy, and that
was good enough.
Standing in the main square
with the group of men, the
moukhtar, or mayor, introduced
me to my cousin, Tala! Alxlouni,
19; who is studying to be a
Moslem leader. We stood there
grinning at eacn other, each a little embarrassed - at what, l
don't know.
The village was immaculateits scrubbed white and sky-blue
cottages a stark contrast to the
desolution of many parts of
Lebanon. We saw more donkeys
than cars in the narrow lanes.
I lunched with Tala! and my

Helen Help Us

By Helen and Sue Hottel
Special Correspoodenls
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
· I am in my first · "management
trainee" job after finishing college.
. At our office, men musi wear suits
· and ties . . .but the women? Even our
lady bosses wear blouses and
·dresses with at least the first three
·buttons unbuttoned. And you should
see the slit skirts! Then they howl if

RumrrtJge sale
set in May

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�P

e-12-Th

ort, Ohio

Pomero

Sentinel_

the key to
You
controlling cancer
TJUs April,

people to help support the American
Cancer Society' s programs to
facilitate the prevention, detection,
treatment and ultimate elimination
of cancer as a threat to public
health, " Cleland and Hollon said.
'We have an army of more than
2,000 ,000 dedicated volunteers
everywhere in the country which is
urging all people to learn about the
society's life-saving information and
share their knowledge with others,"
the ACS leaders said.
"Support of research is one way to
fight cancer," they added, "but we
wonder how many people realize
that we could save many more lives
from cancer right now with just the
knowledge we already have - if
only everyone understood how important it is to detect cancer in its
early and most curable stage."
The entire emphasis of the 1981
Crusade is on the individual,"
Oeland and Hollon said. " We're out
to tell people that it's what they don't
know about cancer that can hurt. We
want to enlist each one in some
phase of our cancer control
programs. That is why our theme
this year is, 'You Are the Key to Can-

the American Cancer
Socjjlty's annual educational and
fund raising Crusade is saying to
everyone, "You are the Key to Can. cer Control."
"Each individual, young and old,
male and female, has a part to play
in the continuing ligtlt to control cancer," say Erma Cleland and Opal
Hollon, newly appointed chairman
and C!H!hairman of the Meigs ACS
Cancer Crusade.
"On Thursday, March 19, at 8 p.m.
at Veterans Memorial Hospital will
tie the Cancer Kick.Qff and we hope
that a captain ami several workers
from every township in Meigs County will be there to hear the speaker,
Paul Baxendale, and to receive the
maierial for the Crusade. A~
proximately 300 volunteers will be
helping with the Crusade and
passing out educational literature to
each home in Meigs County during
the month of April," state
spokesmen.
1
"We'll be asking not only friends,
neighbors, and relatives, but absolute strangers to consult their doc·
tors about cancer-related checkups.
In addition, our volunteers will ask

A bit of history...
be built is covered by deeds of
1877 on property donated by '
George Washington Wolfe and his
wife, Mary Ann Hayman Wolfe.
When the money was counted,
the boys had collected $20 which
they donated towards buying
lumber to be used in the new
church.
Sarah M. Sharpnack died in
1869 and is buried in Letart
cemetery. Some years after the
death of his wife, Hiram Sharpnack moved to Kansas, married a
second time, and he and his
second wife are buried in Kansas.
Young Hiram E. Sharpnack
grew up, married Maggie
(Margaret ) Hayman of Apple
Grove, and both are buried in
Letart cemetery.
Jack Sharpnack, son of Hiram
E. and Maggie Sharpnack,
passed away on Jan. 13, 1980 and
lies at rest in Letart cemetery,
He was married to Elizabeth
Wolfe, who, by the way, is a
great-granddaughter of George
Washington Wolfe, who together
with his wife, Mary Ann Hayman
Wolfe, donated the land on which
the United Methodist Church now
stands at Letart Falls, Ohio.

By Kitty A. Steels
Guest Ufestyle writer
The Letart Methodist Church
as covered by the deed of 1834
was located on the right hand side
of the road which ran along the
Ohio River bank and the road
which began there and went to
East Letart. On the opposite side
of the road from where !lie church building lot was located was
the lot and home of Thomas
Moses ~lexander and his wife,
Alice Sayre Alexander.
Hiram E. Sharpnack was born
in 1863 to Hiram Sharpnack and
Sarah M., his wife. They had
come from St. Mary's, W. Va.
and settled on a farm in Letart
Township. They became members of the Letart Methodist
Church, as did the members ·or
their family as they came along.
When young Hiram E. Sharpnack was 14 years old, he was a
member of a Sunday School class
of 20 boys. The teacher suggested
that each boy wave his nickels,
pennies and dimes until he had a
dollar to give to the new church
which was about to be built to
take the place of the one they
were now attending, built in 1834.
The church which was about to

Woman dies of toxic shock
DENVER (AP) - A Salt Lake
City woman on a skiing vacation has
died of toxic shock syndrome at a
Denver hospital, a disease that has
been linked to the use of tampons, officials said.
Margaret Eager, Tl, died Friday
after a "complete failure of most of
the organs in the body," her father,
Charles H. Eager of Salt Lak~ City,
said.
She is believed to be the third·person to die of the disease in Colorado
since it was identified by two Denver
doctors more than three years ago,
said . Dr. Greg Istre , an
epidemiologist with the Colorado
Department of Health.
Eager said his daughter flew to
Colorado Feb. 26 for a four-day
. skiing vacation but got sick on the
third day. She went to a hospital SunWEDNESDAY
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT Uoils
Club will meet at noon Wednesday at
the Meigs Inn. All officers, directors
and Uons are urged to attend.
BAKE SALE SATURDAY
There will be a bake sale Saturday, March 21, at 9 a.m. at the
Rutland Department Store span·
sored by the Rutland United
Methodist Women.
On sale will be cakes, pies, bread,
rolls, and cookies.

day and was transfeiTed to St. Anthony Hospital Central in Denver,
where she was placed on life-support
systems irrunediately.
A doctor at St. Anthony Hospital
Central, who asked that he not be
identified, said Ms. Eager had "an
illness close to the traditional toxic
shock syndrome. .She was unfortunate enough to get all the complications," he added.
.
Symptoms of the disease include a
high fever, diarrhea, vomiting and a
sunburn-like rash. Eager said his
daughter used tampons, but he was
not sure what brand or type.
The doctor at St. Anthony Hospital
Central said it is not certain that
tampons were involved, noting that
men as well as women can contract
the disease .

Shamrocks, streamers
grace dance scene
Green and white streamers and
shamrocks decorated the Middleport Elementary School
auditorium for the "Fifties-SixtiesSt. Patrick's Day" dance held Satur·
day night.
The Middleport PTA sponsored
the dance which was emceed by
Kenny Hysell, one of "The Jays" in
the fifties. Mick Childs won the

" name that tune" contest, while
Pauline and Dewey Horton and Suzy
Carpenter and her guest were winners of the dance contest.
Refreshments, all donated by PTA
members and parents, were sold
during the meeting. Several came In
costume. Another dance was tentatively scheduled for May I.

Donations made

Discharges from HM C

Monthly donations of $25 are being
made to the Racine Fire Department's tanker truck fund by the
Ladies Auxiliary .
Meeting Tuesday night at the hall,
the women planned a bake sale for
April 18. Doris Williams presided at
the meeting which opened with the
pledge to the flag and the Lord's
Prayer led by Emma Lyons. The
birthday of Agnes Boggess was observed. Others attending were Chris
Shain, Gene Lyons, Oretha Snyder,
Ruth Shain, Debbie Lyons and
Beulah Anderson.

Clifford Demoskey expects to be
discharged Thursday from the
Holzer Medical Center where he has
been confined lor the past week . He
previously spent two weeks at
Veterans Memorial Hospital and
two weeks at Riverside Methodist
hospital in Columbus. Visiting with
TUESDAY
Mr. Demoskey at the hospital and
Bl.RTHDA Y DINNER for mem- Mrs. Demoskey at her home in Mid·
bers , auxiliary members and dleport over the weekend were their
families, 6:30p.m. Tuesday at Drew granddaughter and her husband,
Webster Post 39, American Legion Mr. and Mrs. Drew McKay of New
Home.
Brunswick, N.J.
.GROUP 2, Middleport First
United Presbyterian Church, 7:30
HESS TO SPEAK
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Myron
Tom Hess of the Ohio Attorney
Miller with Mrs. Eddie Burkett, Cl}- General 's office will be speaker
hostess . Mrs. Myron Miller will have when Meigs County Democrats meet
the devotions and the program will at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at Carbe a religious play. The thank of- penters' Hall, E. Main St., Pomeroy.
fering will be taken.
The public is invited.

Social Calendar

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Kenneth
Reed,
Pomeroy; Joelene Hysell,
Pomeroy; Sandra Sheets, Reedsville; Lucy Spencer, Pomeroy;
Mary Sheron, Middleport.
Discharged-None.

t----Marijuana and your ·chi/d·------'------------~------4

Behind the closed door
By JOHN BARBOUR
The Asoociated Preoo
SEVENTH OF A SERIES
Traditionally, the American
family has been the last bas·
tion of privacy. What goes on .
behind the closed front door
has been nobody else's
business.
Even police called to the
ocene of domestic fights are
loath to enter, loath to in·
terfere.
.
The family, like the family
home, has been inviolate.
But today some families are
coming out, opening that door
to other familiea in the neigh·
borhood and sharing some of
their most private rules for
living. They are doing it because it seems it is the only
way they · can cope with ·their
drug-using chidren.
It is an effective way to con·
front the ~eshift value
s&gt;;stem teen·agers have
erected to juatily their use or
alcohol and marijuana.
For mothero and fathers,
raised in the privacy of tradi·
tiona! family settings, it is
often a bruising and unpleas·
ant adventure at first. But
their d08peration in confront·
· ing the fact that their children
are getting high with some
regularity and hiding behind
the secrecy and loyalty of
their peer group has driven
them out.
They have in more and more
neiahborhoods around the
country formed a group that
can only be called ''Super
Peer.''
They bave also been very ef·
ftN:tive. It takes a good deal of
time and patience, but it
workl, The youngsters find
nowhere to hide. The parento
are unified, and so are the
rules for living.

No more "Jimmy does it so
why can 't !? " No more
wondering what they are doing upstair• in the bedroom.
No more wondering where
they are, or where they are going. No more suspicious
smells at school dances. No
more stoned kids lurching out
of the rest rooms. Parents,
acting together, have
reestablished control.
In her booklet, "Parents,

Peers and Pot, " written for
the National ln!ititute on

Drug Abuse, Dr. Marsha
Manatt details the origin and
the workings of one such
group that began with the
growing awareness of two
parents that their 13-year-old
daughter was stuck on pot. It
was her birthday party that
ended in a teen-age orgy that
finally brought the reality
home.

AT A

That scene is frightfully
common. What was different
in this case was the parents'
reaction . It took months of ca·
joling, convincing and con·
fronting the nervous, evasive,
hostile parents but they were
finally able to arrange a meet·
ing of 30 or so. It took longer
than that to reach agreement
on rules for teen-age behavior,
but they did, and the parents
went through the neighborhood from the pinball parlor to
the supermarket as a kind of
informal , concerned police
force. At the same time, they
worked out a positive program to fill the vacuum in
their children's lives. Writes
Dr. Manatt:
.. All of the kids were ground·
ed lor two weeks. No
telephone contacts with
friends. After the two weeks,
freedom had to be earned.
Every outing would be
planned and chaperoned. Col·
lege campuses, rock concerts,
shopping center• with head
shops, unsupervised parties,
all were out. All phone caller•
would have to identify them·
selves and no calls were per·
mitted after 9 p.m. A common
curfew covering all the kids
was set. Allowances had to be
earned and money suppliea
were watched ...
Advocating this kind of
parents pressure, the National
Institute on Drug Abuse
notes the success of ouch
groups. They say their
children are more active and
attentive. get better gradeo,
follow rules voluntarily that
they once thought were un·
fair, and are a bettar inRuence
on their your,ger sibllngs.
Anything thot worko t~at
well is worth the effort.
Copyricht 198J, Tht AHOClatAd

Prell

NEXT: ·Tal/ling (and
Li1toninlli Slraigltt.

DINNER THEATI:R

IS

•

A CURIOSITY- ENOUGH TO
GARNeR A MeNTION IN

'P!OPL.f!'

•

VIewmg

'•

MARCH 17, 11181
EVENING
8:00 CIJerne(J)tmlill\. NEWS
CD BACKYARD
(I)
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
(I) ABC NEWS

Ill! e(l OUf•• CH&amp;Cit tJ~Aifiii!H
VOU WANT COM&amp; ALO~~ •• S£E

I KNI!W !lHE'D TR'I' TO
ALO~!. ,_00/1/ER

GET YOU

WHERE W!&amp;TIGO LIVIH!

OR

LATii~!

{)) 3·2·1 CONTACT Programming
may be Interrupted due to
g!!tdging.
UV OVER EASY 'Marriage and
Refnllrriage ' Gue•ta: Attorney Har·
. rletPNpet andnotedauthorandger·
ontologist Dr. Jamea Peterson .
Host Huoh Downa. (Cioaad·

Ca~tloned: U.S.A.)
8:30 (})UCIJ NBC NEWS
CD 20th CENTURY GUIDELINES
C!J
THE RANGER OF
BROWNSTONE
808 NEWHART SHOW
f Ac;J! THE MUSIC
(I) ()D) CBS NEWS
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
LILIAS, YOGA AND YOU
.. ABC NEWS
6:58
(;IN UPDATE NEWS
HlO
U PM MAGAZINE
CD
GERALD DERSTINE
PRESENTS
(I) ALLIN THE FAMILY
il2) . . FAMILY FEUD
TV HONOR SOCIETY
; (I) TIC TAC DOUGH
(]])
MACNEIL·LEHRER
REPORT
(!D) .!!..EWS
7:30 (I) U BULLSEYE
CD FAITH THAT LIVES
·
C!J BOXING'SBEST:RockyMAR·

1
I

BORN LOSER

00 l

Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Hendrix Sr.

Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Hendrix,
Sr., of Syracuse, will observe their
46th wedding anniversary on Sunday, March 22 with an open house
from 2 to 4 p.m.
The celebration is being hosted by
their son, Franklin (Pete ) Hendrix,
and daughter, Debbie Kauff,
Pomeroy, and Suzana Parson,

~ ~ l\1CII.4.A6"?

"51~

ll-1!31J I'VE;. ~ HIM
Ot-llWO ~VIOI.)&lt;5

I'~

1410WtJ HIM
R:lR 'tEAAS ...

Observe anniversary

cer Control. ' ~

Television

MAJOR F lt.M SiAR APPEARING

OCl.A-S!CllS. ....----:::-::::

CIANO HBO Sportatakea a revealing look at the only undefeated
champ in baKing history .

7:58
8:00

... J GUESS I SHOWED 'EM THEY PICKED
ON TW !IRON6 BOZO! YOU l'iEKE
IN A LOTTA TROUBLE FOR

- YOIJ LOONIN' FEll 6f{JEF,
YA f!I/liE llJ Til' ll161/T

By Supt. L. Gleason
Vote yes and you pay 4 mills for
the bond retiremeot. Vote no and
you pay 4 mills for
the
bond
retirement. If we
don't have an
election and there
is not a vote of any
kind, you still pay
4 mills. That is the
bond issue in a
nutshell.
Many &lt;i you probably have
questions as to how Ibis can be
because it looks like we are getting
something for nothing, and we all
know that usually happens only in
fairy tales. Well, in our case, we
voted in t 968 to run 4 mitis bond
retirement for the maximum number of years (23) to build a new high
school. The law tells us we need to
send all of the 4 mills that we do not
use locally each year (and at least a
minimum of one-half mill) to the
State to help repay the original loan.
The key in thla situation Is that we
must send at least one-half mill but
we do not have to send any more·
than the one-half mill - lf the people
vote to keep it for our local school5.
There will be no additional years added on (because we are not refinan-

ale retuaealo reveal how he is earn·
ing extra money to romance Lori
Beth's rich and beautiful room·
mate, Fonzie sets out to unravel the
~ateo::. (Repeat)

tor revenge and leading to a forbid den court ship between hi at eena ge
son and hie enemy's daughter.
Stars : Janelle Allen, Bill Duke .
(.§_eaaon-Premiere; 60 mine.)
(I) NOVA 'Animal Olympians' The
beauty, G!"'durance and raw power
of animals in the wild are captured
on film as NOVA juxtaposes Olym.
piJ; athliteapertorming feats which
have parallels In the animal kingdom wilh animals who are cham plonaot grace and apeed . (Closed·
Captioned; U.S.A.)

ALLEYOOP

(]]) FAST FORWARD
8:30 CD GOOD NEWS
(!)MOYIE ·(NO INFORMATION
AVAILABL~ "Saturn 3"
(I) !i2l ID
LAVERNE AND
SHIRLEY
(]]) GEORGE SHEARING AT THE
CARLISLE Set In an intimate c:aie.

'j

George Sheanngandbtttiat Brien
Torft i»rtorff! 1 proorem o1 vlnteoe
ShetrUto. including such favorites
u 'Tiitie Can't Be Love', 'My Funny
Valentfi'uf
and
'Lullaby
of
Birdlarid' .
·

CIJ c.BIIUPDATENEWS
0:00 (l) .CIJ FLA-GOROADSem

8:58

" ,.-:-:-

Ma!.j

Curtias•naea Lane Banou'a grow·
ing concern lor her safety and
propoaea marriage , end' Con·
atance Carlyle, in a~ealout rage
afler discovering her husband,
Field. With lane. goes on a binge k1
a roadside bar and later eeducea
Sam. (2 hn.)

-....

I have
some

water?

A lot of work 13 going on at Salem
Center these da)'ll. Ron Drexler and
Bonny Chapman (two teachers) are
working hard on a new bueball
diamond and program for the lddl,
Railroad ties have been put around
the drive through to keep can off the
designated playing area and parenll
are getting organized to help lll!t the
field In shape and start the program.
This 13 greatly needed for the ldda in
that area.

WINNIE

,

Llfo.E

AE'OU T ME ... l 'LL

THE HOU SI:, IX&gt;I NG
ll1E WASH, MENDING,
PERHAPS .•.

FIN D S()METHIN6
TO KEEP ME

·

E&gt;U SY!

;

REGULAR SESSION
Hemlock Gl'alllle mu will !Met in
f88Uiar ~011 at 7:30 p.m. FrWay
'It !he hall.
,
L

ClfMING

OH, DON' T WO RR Y

_r___.....,,

:
·

.
·

BARNEY

DON'T TELL
PAW WHAR
I'M HIDIII.iVOU!!

THEY SAY

MONEY TALKS

YOU M16HT &amp;E IN
NEED OF THESE
iNSIDE . FAC.TS WHEN
YOU'FI:E "HIISH UP!"
Now a"ange the circled letters to
fonn the surprise answer, as sug·
gestad by 1he above cartoon.

K) I

Prlntanswerhere:THE[
Yasterday·s

I Jumbles: PIANO

I XXl I XJ
(Answers tomorrow )

TULIP KNOTTY TREATY

Answer: Fell over himself to have a day out ln the

.

country- TOOK A TRIP

Jurnbtt Book No. 1ft, contalntng 110 puulet, la llallablt for $1.75 pottplkt
lrom Jumble, cJo this newspaper, Box 34, Notwood, N.J. 07648.1ncludt your
Nmt, tddms, zip cOO. and 11111iul cheda payable to Newspaperbookt.

BRIDGE
Uppercut artfully dodged
but a form or the play called
an uppercut where if you run
high you promote a trump
trick for the defense.
SQuth finds himself in a
rather normal spade game
after West has overcalled in

NORTH
• Q 10 8 2

•Qs

• A 10 8 6
+A 6 3

WEST

hearts .

EAST

+4

West leads the king of
hearts and continues with the
ace . East has played the ei~ht
first. so West continues w1th
the jack.

•s

• J 97
2
.J9713
• J 72

.AKJI061
.Q2

+Q 9 8 5

You can ruff in dummy

SOUTH

with the queen and pick up the

+AK6 5 3
.9 7 3

spade suit if it breaks 2-2 or if

+ K 10 4

can ruff with the tO and be in

the jack is singleton or you

.K5

~ood

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

shape if West holds the

Jack . Now , as a reader take a

West

Nortb

East

South

2•

3+

Pass

4+

Pass

Pass

Pas:)

t+.

Opening lead :•K

. By O.wald Jacoby
·and Alan Sontag

look at the East hand. He
holds J 9 7 and either play
~·

loses.

Now let 's get to the winning .
play. Why ruff at all? You see
three clubs each in your hand
and in dummy . If you ruff that
heart you will still have to
lose a club later on, so just
chuck a club and let East and
West whistle for another trick
because they won't get one.
If another heart is led you
can ruff in your hand. If anything else is led just win, play

Here is another hand where
you have to discard so as to

avoid an overrulf. Actually, it
isn't necessarily an overruff,

three rounds of trumps and

eventually ruff your third
dub in dummy.
.
JNEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

~IU-~tr

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
» Golf Items
1 Maine tOwn DOWN
5 Earnings
1 Vllltl005e!
10 Boast
! CoHee's
11 Funl's
attribute
Is candid
l Beelllifui
1% Part
setli!lg

. 13 English
4 Have debts
Roundhead 5 Word after
Yesterday's ADIWer
700CLUB
genera!
silver or iron
IDle THIIEE'SCOMPANY
18 Hotbed
!8 Rosinante
14 Latin
I Wood core
(l)(j§) CIIS TUESDAY MOYIE
%1 Seaman
was one
OF THE WEEK 'Voices ' 1979
love tenn
7 Understand
Stars: Michael Ontk·eaf1, A.my lrv·
2! Nelson
%9 Belgian
IS Signpost
8 Caustic
Eddy filnf
town
9 South Carl}abbr.
~-(fi) MYSTERY! 'Rumpole and
the Course of True Love ' Rumpole
!&amp; Quiet!
Una river
Z3 Hateful
31 Moist
detenda a achoolleecherchargad
17 Hitchcock II Relative of
person
:W Revered
with the co rrup I Ion and aeduc lion of
24
Abhor
(abbr.)
film
the
mongoose
one of his 15 year-old female
atudenta.
(Cioaed ·Captioned;
3S Wager
19 Hasten
15 Winged (her.) 25 Thorny
0:30
TOO CLOSE FOR COM· . ZOSensed
FORT Jackie belie&gt;Jes she's found
.U Wine's
Mr . Right when cupid strikes, but
deUcacy (Fr. )
the affair sends ahock wa&gt;Jes
Z2
stratagem
through the Rush t)ouaehold when
lover boy turns out to be married.
%3 Adhesive
8:45 (I) TIS EVENING NEWS
tO:OO C!J SOME CALL THEM FREAKS !4 Lummo1
!5 Vocal
Richard Kiley hosts asenaiUve ac·
count of acme of the world'e moat
renditions
human odditiee. A comb inationof of
Z8
Letter
hiatoricalatllla and rare footage
with re -creations of actual side·
%7 Descriptive
show Q.!_r1ormencee .
of a fog
Cll!i21.. HARTTOHART Jonathan
30 U.S. air group
is accused of murder, but he can 't
prove his Innocence because an
31 Perfonned
accident totally wipes out his
32Surpass
memory. (Repeat; 60mina.)
33 Gridiron
I]) MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) ""
"PIWChO" 1.0
number
NEWS
:15 Vidal book
10:28
CBN UPDATE NEWS
10:30
FAITH 20
36 ToUIIh
TWiliGHT ZONE
37 Gaelic
10:45
LOVE AMERICAN STYLE
38 Tiny
10:58
C!IN UPDATE NEW'
11:oo
u m m am 9 w •
NEWS
CD TODAY IN BIBLE PROPHECY
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
C!JMOVIE ·(COMEDY)•• "foolln'
AXYDLBAAXI
Around" 1t80
Ia LONGFELLOW
NIGHT GALLERY
11:28
~BN UPDATE NEWS
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A lo
11:30
U CIJ THE TONIGHT SHOW
used for the three I.' s, X for the two O's , et c. Single letters,
Guests : Sally Field, Mel Tillia. (60

~

min a.)

(]] ROSS BAGLEY SHOW

MOYIE
·(MUSICAL·BIOGRAPHICAL) ''
"My Wild lr!J!o Rooo" 11M 7
(I) !i2l 11U
ABC . NEWS
NIGHTLINE
0 (I) CBS LATE MOYIE 'LOU

apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all

hints. Each day the code leiters arc dilferent.

(I)

GRANT :_ Denial ' lou Is absorbed
with a personal problem when he
learns hie younggrlndaon le hard of
hearing . (Repeat) ' CLAWS ' 1977
§lara: Jason Ewers, leon .'.mea .
110) MOYIE ·IMUSICALI "' 1'1

PEANUTS
POMEROY PERSONALS
Mr. and Mn. Dan Uvtngston and
daughter, Jody, spent the weekend
with Mr. Uvinflllton's mother, his
grandmother, and sister in Kentucky.
· Mrs. Pat Welty and daUIIhter,
Vikki, Butler, were weekend guests
of her mother, Mae Cro~~~er, and
sister, Mn. Ma~ Hoblltetter.

IWEABERI
I [j

t'ii't4b.

If I can be of any assistance to you,
please contact me at 992-2153.

RECUPERATING
AT HOME
Mn. Mary Harrllls NCUper~~linl!
at home following confinement to
the Holzer Medlcla Center fqo
rriedical treatment,

tJ

W

Polly will send you one of her
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column. Write POLLY'S POINTERS in care of this newspaper.

cing our original loan) .
The bond issue is a step in the right
direction and we all have to agree
the price is rigIt (no coort). Information is currently being assembled to provide each of you with a
better understanding of what thla
issue is all about and will be
disseminated after we get the approval needed from the State.
Photographs have been taken of the
worst building problems in our
district for use in my presentation to
the State Department. The pictures
will hopefully show the tremendOUI
need our district has for additional
funds to fix the buildings.

I HELEW I
rJ 1

CIJ(ft)ID HAPPY DAYS When Pot·

Qt(l)l10) PALMERSTOWN Ab;tter
feud is revived, targeting W.O. Hall

A.

{

I [j-

Cll ORAL ROBERTS

Fake fur needs cleaning ·

Round Meigs Local

Dill JOKER'S WILD
HOLLYWOOD SOU ARES
(]]) DICK CAVETT SHOW
MATCH GAME
• FACE THE MUSIC
l:.BN UPDATE NEWS
UCIJ BJANDTHEBEARBaar

is kidnapped by the unscrupulous
Rutherford Grant, who schemes to
have BJ framed fort he money that
'Grant 'borrowed' to bribe a judge .
(§_0 mins.)
·

ANNIE

A MINUTE THE~E

·DEAR POLLY- I read your an~ '
swer to Alfreda, who wanted to know
how to wash a white bedspread with'
ball fringe on it. Uke you said, the
best way to wash anything with ball
fringe is to dry it outside on a line on
a hot, windy day. First I let It soak in
a washtub in cool, soapy water, then
put in another tub of cool, soapy
water and then rinse In at least two
tubs of clean, cool water. Most ball ·
fringe is cotton and will not shrink if
washed in cool water.
After rinsing, put in another tub of
cool water with a generous amount
of fabric softener. Do not wring, but
put in your clothes basket dripping
wet and hang on the Une. Do not
squeeze the balls. They will dry JW!l
as fluffy as when you bought the
spread. - MARYV.
·
DEAR POLLY - I think I have a
great way to was~ bedspreads with,
fringe on them, and it is a time•
saver, too. I wash such a spread in
my machine on the genUe cycle, put
in the dryer for just a few minutes on
high, then take it out and hang 011 the
clothesline. It dries on the line with
no angled fringes. This really worka
well for me, and I hope it does the
same for others to try it. - MRS. A.

b

I ouNao

Hawke va Cleveland Cavaliers

Polly's Pointers
By Polly Crllfller
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY - My brown fakefur coat needs cleaning, but the
inside label says,
" Do not dry clean.
Clean by !ur
method only ."
The dry cleaner
infonned me the
"clean by fur
method only" was
not guaranteed,
as the fur could
Cramer
fade or become matter. A friend told
me of a home method using corn
meal and something else, but she
could not remember what. Any
suggestions on cleaning this ·coal
would be greatly appreciated. FLORENCE
DEAR FLORENCE - A reliable
furrier advised me that such coats
should be taken to furrier to be
cleaned, not to a regular dry cleaner
- unless, of course, they also
specialize in cleaning furs .
As for a home "remedy/' I have
cleaned furs with plain corn meal,
nothing added. Rub it in with
toweling and then brush off. Shake
the coat before starting to brush,
and the job will be easier. Be careful
about the firmness of the brush -·
you want to do a thorough job, but
not pull the hairs. Fake curly furs
are another story, as adhesive might
have been used, so do not try that at
home.- POLLY

Unscramble tneH four Jumbles,
one letter to Md'llqUirt, to form
fOuf ordinary W!lldo.

NBA BASKETBALL Allanla

(I)

Racine.
Other children of the couple are :
Louie Hendrix, Lucy Phil, Eugene :
Hendrix, and Sally Hendrix, Kansas; Dave, Earl Dana and Woodrow
Hendrix, Jr., Milwaukee, Wis.; Nor- ,
man and Mary Hendrix, Syracuse. · •
Relatives and friends are invited
to call during the open house hours.

ltft~rut ~~ ~THAT BCRAIIIILED WORD GAME
~ 1.!::'1 ~~·
byHenrtAmoldand~Loe

'r'ES MA'AM? '{OU WANT
.ME 'ro READ M'f TERM
PAPER TO THE CLA55?

WELL, I MAV HAVE A
LITTLE DIFFICULTY
READING IT. ..

"Kin ~d I" 1058
12 :00 CIJ ii! 11U TUESDAY MOVIE Of
t!f!_l¥EEK
12:30 (}) U (1) TOMORROW COAST·
TQ-COASTGueoto:PeterStrauaa,
Don McLetn . (90 mine .)
12:45 CJJ MOYIE ·!THRILLER)" "Ha
Knowo You'ro Alono" 1080
12:58 ~ CBN SPORTS REPORT
1:00
OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR
1:35 . MOVIE~DRAMA)"I'o "Uch
"n 1Dlo" 1038
2:00
WORLDVIEW
NI!WS
MliBELIEYI!

M

CIVPTOQUOTES

ZQE'KW
QLY
UQI.

MQG

MNQLDYM
GROO

ZQEN

GQ
YQ

J Q

ZQEN

ARGGWN

MNRYJCRGUWN

L R F . - R y Q Y
Yeslerday'Cryploquote : THE COOK WAS A GOOD COOK, AS
COOKS GO; ANDASCOOKSGO,SHE WENT.- H.H.MUNRO

1----------------------.,..
PATCHOGUE, N.Y. (AP) - Most often a "rock·a·
thon" would be associated with a dance 1narathon contest, but not at this church youth-group fundraiser .
The "rock-a-thon" was a rocking-chair contest, won
by Jon Rossman, 17. He kept his chair rocking for
nearly 12 hours, even while eating. He ''outrocked" 3()
other participants, a~tributing his success to"lots of
' padding." '
"':

�Pa e-14-The Dail Sentinel

Tuesda , March 17 1

St. Patty's Day
' 'o the green in America...

-•
Lost ond Found
'MALE 8 monlh Old Blue
Tick . L.osl vicinity Gold
Ridge , 681 west. Anvone
\lndlng phone 992·6341 .

Help Wanted
KIT 'N' CARLYLE '"
by Larry Wright
GET VALUABL.E !raining
!!IS a young business person
and earn gOOd money plus
some great gifts as -a Sen -'
11M ~!tiU TI\Rnll:t+l AN
tinel route carrier , Phone
LO!J1 : man's wallet near the u!. right away and get on
t.~~y CR.IS I~­
Heiner's bread store In the ellg lb;llty list at 992CN?i..~IE 1-\A~
Middleport . Please return 2156 or 992·2157.
to Michael Roach, Box 642,
MliC.H
Mason, West Virginia SUSSTITUTE BookmobHe
'25260. C.O.D. No questions Driver-Clerk : Occasional
OF IT.
work on short not ice to
,.sked. Reward.
drive bookmobile, do si m·
tasks, and work
Lost : young red t ick male pte clerical
.the public. Must ha ve
coondog, Bailey Run Road with
high school diploma, vatid
area . John Koehl er. 992· chauffer's
license, and ex·
5056.
perience driving large
truck . Pick up or write for
job appHcat;on at OVAL
8
Public Sale
Bookmobile.
922 E. Ma;n
&amp; Auction
St., Pomerov 45769.
'AUCTION · Large farm
equipment auction, Sat., 12
Situations Wanted
Ma rc h 21st. at Siders
Equipment Co., on U.S. Work In daytime helping
Hwy .
35, Henderson. elderly people. Rutland·
W.VA ., ca ll fo r deta ils. 675"- Pom eroy -Middl eport area.
3-440. Sat. March 21st. 10 742·2288.

•

the wearzn New.... Beginnings supper club at PVH.

marchers were expected, and
more than 2,000 extra police were
on hand.
In Georgia, parades were set in
Atlanla and Savannah, where
city officials contend their march
is second in size only to New
York's.
Savannah's parade was to in·
elude 18 floats and ;!8 bands.
"The place is loaded up with
people who just walk, almost like
Mardi Gras," said Jerry Hogan,
parade coordinator.
Dublin , Ga ., founded 169 yea rs
ago by an Irishman · named
Jonathan Sawyer, had a parade
scheduled for Saturday. ·
In Chicago, part of today's
celebration - led by Mayor Jane
Byrne - included turning the
Chicago RiVer green with hundreds of pounds of dye. St. Paul,
Minn. , outshines twin city Minneapolis every St. Patrick's Day
with a much-bigger parade.
In Denver, the Volunteers of
America were serving 23,000 corned-beef-and-cabbage meals to
the city's elderly. Cooks started
the day with 1,200 pounds of beef
brisket, 1,000 pounds of canned
green ""-r. But Alan Luks, direc- potatoes, 800 pounds of cabbage
tor of the New York Affiliate of and 3,200 Irish soda bread
the National Council on biscuits.
Alcoholism, said the holiday has
Meanwhile, the Newark, N.J. ,
become "an annual orgy of sta ....Ledger reported in today's
abusive drinking ."
editions that President Reagan
Cooke, speaking at an annual would name a New Jersey in·
musical celebration at St. surance executive today to be
Patrick's Cathedral on Sunday, ambassador to Ireland.
urged New Yorkers to "moderate
The newspa per sa id the
any grossness in the spring nominee would be William Mcfestival that has been growing up Cann, 50, of Shori Hills, president
around St. Patrick's Day."
of Foundation Life Insura nce in
The New York parade route Chatham. McCann refused to
goes up Fifth Avenue, right past COilllllent on the report. The
the huge, ornate Gothi"style White House also refused to cornchurch. Tens of thousands of ment.

MARCHI7

Thousands of Irish-Americans
were parading in New York,
Chicago, savannah, Ga., and
scores of other cities today in a
festive tlibute to their patron, St.
Patrick. Cardinal Terrence
Cooke urged the celebrators to be
religious, not raucous.
Meanwhile, in California, two
snake races were being held to
honor the saint credited with
bringing Chlistianity to Ireland
and dliving the island's snakes
into the sea.
For some, St. Patrick's Day is
a chance to raise a cup of good
cheer - perhaps in the form of

POINT PLEASANT, W. Va. There is an exclll'live new supper
club , in town. It features a free
congratulatory meal, and the only
membership requirement .is to have
a baby born at Pleasant Valley
HospitaL
The New Beginnings Supper Club
has been started at Pleasant valley
Hospital and is available to the
parents of each new baby born in the
O.B. deparlment. The complimentary meal features a choice of
broiled steak, baked pork chops; or
baked chicken breast served with
baked potato or french fries;
seasoned green beans; steamed
broccoli with cheese sauce; hot
rolls, dessert of fruit pie, cream pie
or cake and your choice of beverage.

congratulatory meals to the 11e1J

Thecongratulatorymealisserved
complete with tablecloth and bud
vase in the new mother's room at the
hospital. Each new tmther will
receive a printed invitation which includesthemanufromwhichsheand
ht!r guest can select their favorite
items.
This new seritce was initiated in
the O.B. department on March 3,
1981. The first members of The New
Beginnings Sup~er Club at Pleasant
Valley Hospital were Mr. and Mrs .
Bill Mallette of Point Pleasant. They
enjoyed the free steak dinner just
two days after the birth of their son,
Thomas Robert Mallette.
Since t!'.e New Beginnings Supper
Club was formed, Pleasant Valley
Hospital has provided 40

parents.
Robert H. Carper, executive dlrector of Pleuant Valley Hospital, said,
"The New Beginnings Supper Cllll?
is a new dimension in helllth cere
services provided to patients and
families at Pleasant Valley
Hospital."

from the once-a-year green beer
type of celebration ," sa id
Thomas -Patrick O'Keefe of
Colwnbus, president of central
Ohio's Shamrock Club and
historian on 19th century Ireland.
" I think there's a real renaissan-

ce. "
According to O'Keefe , whose
great great-grandparents lived in

'l'liESDAV
MEIGS COUNTY Heart ABBn.
meeting 12 noon Tuesday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital; hw·
cheon reservations to be made with
Lois Kelly, 981H270.
CHESTER COUNCIL 323 ,
Daughters of America meeting,
Tuesday, 7:311 p.m. with quarterly
birthdays to be observed.

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE

Notice is hereby given
tha t on F r iday , March 27,
1981 at 10 :00 A.M . a publi c

sale w ill be held at the offices of The Ce ntral Trust
Co .• NA of M iddl eport, Ohi o
to sel l for cash th e

1me

t Every

Public Notice
CL.4MCJ!P

liAS
20 ·2 0 ·20
Pi.VS

£YES!r3Jir ...
ANCJ

11JEN 'THE W TLE

7H£N

coins , ri ngs, jewelry, etc .
Contact Ed Burkett Sarber

Shop. Middleport.

~103. '

RACINE

GUN SHOOT.
Racine Gun Club, every

stw.: ....

Friday ni ght start in g at
7:30 p .m . Fac tory choke

tot lowing col la tera t to wit :
1 1978 Ford Couri er PU

guns only .

Ser. No. SGT BU Y14719.
The Cen tr al Tru st Co., N A ,

Middleport . Ohio reserves

the right fa bid at this sa le.
Mi' r. 15. 16. 17

PUb 0
1;c'"'N"oc:t;c:c-:o~~

Racine

Volunteer

742·2951

or 992-

appointment January-Mar-

ch . 992&lt;2264 . 992·2802. 992·
2360 or 992 ·2639. Histor ies
for sa l e Pom eroy ·
Middl eport l ibraries.

lr1Memoriam
In memory ot our dear son
and brother , SP-4 Larry
Ri chard Stobart, who di ed
~igh t year s ago an March 7.
1973 in Korea .

makes

What

man?

a

man, a

A son, a son? A. brot her . a
brother ?
Many th ings that c an' t be

expressed,

That rT! ak es you love
another .
A word. a l augh , a look ,
the ir face.
are beloved and alway s

.:====

1981 V.W. RABBIT GASOLINE

Tired of pe nn y pinching??
Housewi ves and mothers ,
change spare time intoS$$5
Flexible hours. excellent
ea rnings , free wardrobe .
Two even.i ngs a week . For
more informat ion call 991·
39.4 1or 669·4535
Decorated cakes tor all

baby ....

missed by nis
mother . Mrs . Edna

Sadly

StQ b a rt ,
brothers .

sis t e r s,

Giveaw•

Four puppies. Part nor-·
wegian elk hound . 992· 398 1.
One year old female ger ·
man shephard. Very gentle
and gOOd wlfh ch ildren .
Also three puppies, part
husky and part german

PHONE 992-2156

eANNOUNCEMENTS

e RENTALS

1- C,tl or n"nkl
1- lrl M em or o•m

U - HoVUI tor R1n1

H - M"bilt

4 - GtYfiWI'f

S- HIPPY AIU

4S- ,ROOml

• - Loll 1nd Fo\lnd
1- Y•rd hlt-

41- Spact lor Rent
u - w•ntf'd lo II tnt
41- EQur,mll'll tor Rent

eMERCHANDISE

,, _ HtiPwa"'ecl
ll- Stlulted Wlnlld

SJ - C I , TV , Radio Equipment
U - Antique•
t4 - Miu . Merctlandlil

14- lllltn ru lrl!rltnlf

tS- IUl ldlnt StJpplill
t f - Pth lor hll

Qooch

U - S&lt;"OOI111UifUChOn

lllllloo. r v

eFARMSUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
Hn11U-

e FINANCIAL
1 1-

IIUIIniU
Op por!Unll'{
11 - Mone ~ to Lou
lJ- Prol"soonal
StrVO(tl

F•r'" !Equipment
wantH to l u ~
Truc.h ltr hit
L!'f'IIIOCit

•4- Mar I G rain
as- ,;efll&amp;

,.,,,,,I.,

eTRANSPORTATION

eREAL ESTATE

t l - Avto, fGr h it
ll- Vnl I 4 W D.

JI - Homn tor S•lt l
JJ- Mob•lt Hom u
tor Slit
ll - Farrtu lor Selt
h - IUI Intu l1,u ictinvs
H - Lotsl Acruv•

n - Aulo Ralll lr

1 1 - Ho~t~tlm!lro'f'tltlttlll

I JO P . M

D11l~

U - Pit,ff.,lint &amp; IUI'f'lllnt
U - ltCI'f'lllnt
14 - lltctriut
&amp; llillrlt~rerton

U - M . H . llit11eir
U -V!IhOIIter~

Cllfil

Clllr"

1.01

1.U

1.10

1...
i .U
Ul

....
1.01

Elch word onr !1'11 m fn1mum I S worCII II 4 Ullll Hr wtrt ,., tty ,
Adl fUIIIIIIIf Ollltr tftln COIIIfCUII'f't day I Will 1M CtllrtHit lftt I .IY

In mtmory , CarG ol 1oan•" •nil Oflll\lery 1 ctnll ttlr wtri, U .tt
min1mum . Clift In 1c1vuu.
MOflll t HO"'e 111ft 1M"' .1 rd llltfltf eC:UPfM On tv WIUI Cllftwmt
Grcttr . U Cet'lt ch•r .. lGI 1ft c:trrylftl lo• Nwmflar In Clrt tt TIM

hnlinlt.

·· high school diploma
·' graduate, you may quali f y.

991

1
WANTED
The follow ing
: musicians to form a rock
• band · Lead guitar, second

n - oenerat H111llnt

IJ Words or Under

l dlyl
• dl)'l

:, senior in high school , or a

1

Rates and Other Information
I dl y
1 dl'l'l

teed toys and gifts. NO cash
in ves tm ent , no col lecting,
Clet l\'e r ing . Car &amp; phone
, necessarv. Call collec t ,
· Carol Dav . 518·489·8395.
'
' Some part tt me jobs In Pt.
Pleasa nt come with a
' 11 ,500 bonus I Plus lree
college tuition! If you are
age 17 or older. a junior or

..' LA DY or girl to li ve in .
: 1686 .
' -- .. -

eSERVICES

11 Noon serurCI~
tor Monday

45
Furnished Rooms
Sleeping roams; by the
week. Kitchen, and

Free Estimates

KEN SOLES
245-9113

All Models
Available

LEO MORRIS
.Rt . 1 Side Hilt Rd.
Rutland. 0~ .

television lounge , Carr'yout
store and restaurant within

SOOfeet. 992·6370 .

1

2·19-tfc

H ti c

46
SpaceforRenl
COUNTRY MOBIL.E Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
992-7479 .

ROGER HYSELl'S MIUIR ELECTRIC
SERVICE
GARAGE
For all of your wir·

KAUFPS

PWMBING
AND
HEAnNG

-Auto and True!(
Repair
-Transmission
Repair
Hrs.: Mon.-Fri.
9A.M.·5:30 P.M.

12 Park St.
Middlepor1, Oh .
Ph. 992-6263 .
Anytime

992·5682

3 2 1

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

ing needs.
Let George Miller check
your present electrical
system ,
Residential
&amp; commercial

Call742-3195
or 992-7680

10-7-tfc

1·8-tfc

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER

BISSELl
SIDING CO.

ROOFING

SERVICES"
-Addonsand

"Specializing In
Re·Roollng"
eSmall Carpenter Jobs
Darrell Brewer
PH. 992·2882
992·2606
992-7861
, 3·11 ·1 mo. pd.

remOdeling

1
- Roofing and gutter

work

.....:.Concr,ete work
- Plumbing and
electrical work

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garage.s "
Call for free siding
estimates, 949·2101 or

(Free Estim1tesl

C YOUNG II
V, ,
992-6215 or 992-7314

949·2160.
No sunday Calls

GRAVEL'fTRACTOR
SALES

&amp; SERVICE

mo • '

S N;P~i:R - Push I sel l
~~~=~~~;~,::~~tr.utors.

Farm_ Bu'lld
' ·ngs

1

Sizes
"From 30x30"
SMALL

pro.

Ut'lity Bul'ldl'ngs
I
Sizes from 4»c4 to 12'x.40

WEEOEATER - Brushculler&amp;
trunmen

5'TIHL - enl111 c utters &amp; tnm ·

~:~~o-". w"'" mow"'

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Bo• 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614·843·2591
6·1Hfc

Wt urv•ce w ll•t we u 11 1

Sm• U Engones- Our Spec•• ll ~
104 Condor St.
Pomeror , 0 11 .
PH. 't92 ·n75
3 S I mo

• Backhoe
E~ttcavating

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

DUMP TRUCK
Ph. 992·7201

. 1 J~-

1,~,
~!~'
•.".

t,

r

~
~ J. '":.

'
'

.

J

w,

~tl tr

THE
KOUNTRY
KWB
scautCiml Rlt.

c

1

o•

hu " • ·
• ~ ~or t Gn 11

Spo~cialilll

_;..·,..

*~::!~",•:a~~;:;:•
tor .. lr,

I~P ~ u• liT~ JI.OOI5 1n'a

1hon . lrua n1mn llh :
8AOWNIHG ' Work, lllk •no, " unlono or
t• snlno OOOh.
Pra· Sh u v all , tnwo l,

••n

torm1l1 nd ,onono ~nau .

W• 1110

urr~

1 co mp1111 line ol Brown·

_ _ mo.
2 26 1

IRG SpOrlln!IGOOIIi .

dtJN

REESE
.
TRENCHING
SERVICE

CONSTRUCTION

.

• New Homes · ex ·
tensive remodeling
• Electrical work
• Roofing work
12 years
Experience
Greg Roush

.

Water·Sewer· E tectric
Gas Line-Oitt;hes
water Line Hook· ups
septic Tank_s
county Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh .

Ph. 992-7583

Ph. 367-7560

2 23·1 mo.

3·5· 1 mo.

· ·

_ !

ROUSH

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES
•

-~

ALL STEEL

GRAVELY- Walk
belll!ld I
ndin9 tr. ctors . Pus h &amp; self ·pro .

:g uitar , orgen or piano
• player, drummer, trumpet
: player, tenor sax . Must be
' able to piny rock and soul
: music. Interested peo~l e
, must have their own equ1p·
: ment. serious parties call

' l·J04·67S·2210.

· Woman to help cMo tnr
by rl r
' thrltls. Room. board , some
; wages. 992·7126,

~ elderly lady crippled

envelope
addr essers
needed 1 For Information

mall self addressed s tt~m ·
ped envelope to : Bt9 W
Summ iT, Ou r and, Ml Ml-1.-

1

SUPPLIES

ROOfiNG

Res idential &amp; Lighf
Commercial Electrical

All types of rool work ,
new or repair gutters
c1nd downspouts, gutter
cleilning and painting.
All work guc1ranteed.
Free Estimates
..teasonabte Prices
Call Howard

540. •x 16" plows ; M. F . 13.5'

949 ·2862
949 ·2160

u · Harogator ;

Int. tra ctor, 986 . 304·675-

Tftjs Ad tor Futurt R:eter eoce

APPLIAN
Call Ken Young
For FestSer..-ice

985·3561

!'uoplies

Qualify Products
, Reasonable Prices

JOYCE ELECTRICAL
SUPPLIES
College Rd .
Syracuse .
Oh .
Ph. 992·3804
2 23 1 mo.

PART5 AND SE~VI CE
ALLMAI&lt;ES
ew.utu~n
'• Dispouls
•Dr yer s
• Diihwastuen

IRantu
•HotV..:at•rTanks
Repilliriog S1n&lt;e I.S~
,.. Coin L&lt;~undriM
,.. Renta l Propertln
..- Apt . HouseOwnen
... Mobile HGmt Parks

2245.

PACQUALE

12 horsepower Cub Cad et

tractor and 48 inch mower.
10 inc h plow with 3 po;nt
hitch . Phone 949 ·2681.

ELECTRICAL CO.

Plow for A tarmall. One
hor se drawn pio.w . 949-2854.

HOW ABOUT A 9'/,'lo
LOAN? Th is ranch style

Dramatic square neckline is ac-

cented by an allo"'r desian ol
pretty pineapples. C1ochet tuniC
ol medium-weicht. 4-ply syn.
theliC sport y!tn in a soh pastel.
Pa~ern 7594: S1zes 8·14 mel.
$2.00 lor each patleln. Add 501
"'h pa~ern lor litst-class a1r·
m01l aod handlmg. Stlld to:
Alice illoolls
'! i
Nttdltcralt ~1.
·
The Qaily Sentinel
Boo 163, Old CheiHI SIJ., Ntw
York, NY 10113. Prin1 Nentt,
Addrts&amp;, Zip, Patttm Numbtl.
Catch on lo the mit boom' Send
i01 our NEW 1981 NEEOLECRArT
CA1ALOG. Ooer liZ deSigns, 3
hee patterns InSide. SI 00
1111 CRAFT 1110115. .$1.75 tach
134-14 Qulcl Machine Quills
uu1111lon Hamt eunun,
132.Qult Oriel""'
Ill-Add 1 Blocl Quills
·130-Swuttr Fnlllans-Slm 31-56
129.Qulcll 'n' £., Trwlln
121-(nltlopt Palellm Quills
127 -AiaJuns 'n' Daili•
126-Thrittr C.tltr Flowtrs
125-Ptlll Quills
121-PIIlaw Shaw.()ffs
lt8·C1ochet with Squar•
117-Eat Art ol Nttdlipoint
114-CGIIIplttt AlaJuns
112-Prla Allh•m
lll·blr Afl olllllrpin Clat:htt
110.11 .Httr Rqs
ltJI.lmtlllt ........
l07·1mllnt Stwln1
lDi·lmtJnt FISitkll
104-lns!Jnl Man11
103·15 Qullb 1o1 roa,

·--·-·-·-

--· - ·~

1976

Plymouth Valore
wa~on ,
air conditioning,
etc., ver y nice . S1SOO.OO .

Electric

basebo~rd

heat . $24.000.00 .
AT THE EDGE OF
TOWN - Approx , 6
acres and a 1'h story
home with 3 bedrooms.
family
room , out -

building, hot water heat.
water softener .
$29,500.00 .
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr .
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Dottie &amp; Roger Turner
992·5692
Jean Trussell94t-2660
OFFICE 992-2259
and a

&amp; carrier
AIR CONDITIONERS
&amp; HEAT PUMPS
Ph. ,14·992·7031

WRAP it ower sh1rts jumperor wear 1t as a su ndress·
pinarore. Whip it u~ in a momrng
ol denim. polis hed cotton ,
Da&lt;:ton blends. Easy!
Printed Pattern 460Z: Misses
S11es 8, 10, 12. 14, 16, 18. Size
IZ (bust 34) takes 2~ yards
60-inch fabric.
$2.00 "" uch ptHtll. Add 504
,., etch ptlllrn ,., finl-&lt;llss
tirflllil anof hlodlln1. Stnd 10:
Annt Adllll
1 'l 1

3% on

ns.ooo

5°r11 on balance.
Conventional LoansS%
down
Cr~ll tor Information

992·7544

3-ll ·lmo.

1978 FORD Fi es ta . Front
wheel drive . 35 m.p.g. Good
cond. 992 5170.
1973 Bu ick . Transm;ss;on
completely ove rhauled .
9 4
$loo.
---- _
1975 Foret Granada in e)( ·
cellent condition . Phone
992 3288.

~. ~'-·

THE DABBLE SHOP

SALE

NOW OPEN

20%-30% OFF

1·21 tfc

J&amp;C
SANITAnON
SERVICE

ALL CAKE

Mon.·Wed . IO :OG-9:00
Tues. F rL-Sat.
10 :00·5:00
Closed Thursdays
Stop ;nand see our Une
of plastercraft. You can

Glen s;ssell at 949·2801 or
949 2860.

sty~

no monev down
Federal Housing -

,

71 - - AuloSt;,:-sai;----------

- 3 bedrooms, kitchen ,
dining area, all on one
floor . Could have full

carpeting .

------

992· 7544
VA loan s-

Rheem , Amana

........ , ..........
.............. .

JUST SIX YEARS OLD

and

Ph. Pomeroy
614·992-7038
3·11·1 mo.

gelding with saddle and
br;dle. S400.00 . Phone 882·
3242.

erator,
a nd
wood
burner . Also nice ,block
garage. S24,900.00.

range

and Residential

11 mo nth old male colt for
$150.00 . Atso one gentle

assumable loan .
Excellent buy at
134.900 .00.
TWO ACRES - and a 2
bedroom ran ch home
witfl range , refrig -

basemen! If finished .
$19,500.00.
OWNER WILL HELP
FINANCE - ThiS 3
bedroom homeon Bppro)( , 1 acre lot In country . Close to the mines.
Need a small down pay·
men I. S 13.500.00 .
MINI FARM - With ap·
prox . 15 acre and a 2
bedroom home .with

-- --

.CUNNINGHAM
&amp; ASSOC.
Mortgage Bankers

GALliA
REFRIGERATION
INC.

Industrial. Commerc ial

Livestock
~

91h %

Top off sk1rts or pants with this
loq, lona·sleeild tunic.

eHea t Pumps
• El ec tric Heating
&amp; W ir ing

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

63

3 bedroom, all electr ic
hom e in Eastern district
ca n be yours with a
down payment and a

perience helpful. Guara n

; SFC O'Noai67S·3950.

u - Rnl Eltettwentad

Want-Ad Advertising
Dtldlines

50"-20-JO"H. P.
HA 60"-25-60 H.P.
60"- 45-80 H: P .

5621.

Dunham

; FRIENOLY HOME Toy
Parties now In our 26th
year, is expanding and has
openings for managers &amp;
' dealers. Par ty Plan ex

:. The West Virginia Nal ion,ll
: Gvl!lrd IS no ordinary pnrt
1 time job! Good pa y, good
' benefitS! For de1a ils call

J4- Moltrcycles
I t,Auto P1r11
IACUUot'IU

H - ltnltors

Thr ee room Bnd bath apartment in Pomeroy . 992·

Di sc. ; fe r t . auger ; I set
snap on 15.5x38 dua l tires ;
N.H. 367 Manure Spreder ;

~- 1755 .

I Au chon

I Cl Rtp,for
1•- W•ntecll o Do

rent. 992·5908 .

Kuker 400 gal. spray ; tnt.

'please phone 992 3941 or
•6119 4535.
'
'WANTED : 3 people to sell
Avon . Call 742 2354 or 742

9- Wanttd to Buy

SI - Houuhold

HeadquartPr&lt;:

' A\'erage SIO.OO per hour
plus free wa rd robe for
thos e who qualify .
Management opportunity
open . For free infomafi on

Homn

lor Rtnl
u - A,.Irtment lOt Rent

DENNEY
CHAIN LINK
FENCE

ARD

Four room apartment for

r~====:;~3~·1~1~~tf~c~~==~~~~O~h~.=~~=======;;;:~

homemakers who love
,pretty fash ions and want to
•keep up on current stytes.

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

11-

'-----------r---------"""1

Wanted to Bu

Attractive part time wprk
t or
w e ll
groo m ed

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dep1 .
111 Cour1 51., Pomero-r, 0., 45769

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Vil lage .Manor Apartments
at992-7787.

~=========~~=======~~~~~~=;;::~~~~~
H. L WRIJESEL
ELECTRICAL
uep
CE SERVICE

WANT AD INFORMATION

1- PY bio &lt; hit

Unfurnished one bedroom
apartment for rent. Ren·
1ers assistance available
for senior citizens. Contact

Easy-see Diagram

4

a nd Shephard. 949· 141 7.

l - •nnounctmtntt

Business Services

3 AND • RM furnished ap·
ts . Phone 992-6434.

Lacy Pullover

sheet ca kes. and wedding
cakes. Call 992 6342 or 992 ·
2583.

,.,.
Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
Box 729

oc ·

cassions. Character cakes ,

th ere ..

T ime can never take
away , the love.
for the one th at was and is
not ther e.
We miss you son, brot her ,
sold ier , railway worker .
sc hool bov . tin v tot ,

for Rent

t~~~L~-~~tJi

ME IGS MU SEU M open by

1981 V.W. RABBIT DIESEL

195 Upper River Rd.

PIANO . Too
to negl ect. e)(pert
and repair . Lane

F ir e
Departmen t sponsors a
shot gun a. rifle mat ch
every Sat. night 6:30 p.m.
at the ir build ing in Bashan .
Factory· c hoke 11 guage
shot guns onty . Open sig hts
22 rifle

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classifieds and
Savell I

RIVERSIDE V.W.

YOUR
valuable
tuning &amp;
Dani els,
2082.

Apartment

~~====~~·~· ~m~o=.~t~==~~~~==~fr=====~~==;

! PAY h ighest pr i ces
possible for gol d and silver

UNION LABEL ·AND
·PRINTED .I N '
CHICAGO , ILL .

44

our home. Women, men, or
couples. Trained and ex·
--------~
WANTED TO BUY : perie!lCed
. 992 -7314.
r
TRAILER spaces for rent.
GOLD,
SILVER,
Southern Valley Mobile
PLATINUM , STERLING · Have vacancv for e lderly , 32
Mobile Homes
32
Mobile Homes
Home Park , Chesh ire, Oh.
COINS, RINGS.JEWELR· Room and boa rd, laundry,
for Sale
for Sale
992·3954.
Y, MISC. ITEMS. AB· Reasonable 992-6022 .
1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65, 1969 PMC 3 bedroom
MARKET
SOL UTE
bedjooms, new car- traHer. 12x60. 992·395o.
· ~RICE GUARANTEO . EO
Repa ir or r emode li ng three
BURKETT
BARBER work. Floors, doors, walt pet. 1971 Cameron , 14 x 64,
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT , pan eling, ce iling tile. two bedrooms, new carpet .
1972 Champion, 12 x 60, two
OHIO 992·3476.
siding and painting , 992· bedrooms,
new carpet. 1976 1971
HUicrest Mob ile ..
5tc........:H=ou"'s"e"'
' h'"ol.,d_,G,o,od=s2759.
Cameron, 11 x 60, · two ' Home . 'st trailer on OLD COINS. poc ket wat·
!Jedrooms, all e lectric . 197t
tric
range
.
Avacado
ches, class rings, wedding
Signature
double
oven elec ·.
Skyline . 12sx 6). two Harrisonville Rd.
13
Insurance
1125 .00. 992-5954 after 4
bands, diamonds . Gold or
bedrooms, bath &amp; lfJ, new
silver . Call J . A. Wamsley, AUTOMOBILE
IN · carpet . 1970 PMC ,
pm
LQts &amp; Acreage
Treasure Chest Coin Shop, SURANCE bee n can · 12 x 60, two bedrooms , new 35
Athens, OH . 594-4221.
ce ll e d? Lo st
your carpet. 8 x S Sales, Inc., TRAIL.ER LOT for sale. 53
Antiques
$4,000 .00 . 992·2571.
operator ' S license? Phone 2nd x Viand Street, Point
ATTENTION:
(IM ·
Pl easant. WV Phone 675·
Wanted to Buy : class rings, 992·2143.
PORTANT TO YOU ) WHI
4424.
wedding bands , anything
Acreage : One acre and one pay cash or certified check
stamped, lOK . I'K , or 18K 18
half of ground located bet· for antiques and cot lec ·
Wanted
to
Do
gold . Silver coins. pockCt
ween o ld Rt. 33 and new R t .
or entire estates .
watches. Call Joe Clark at F urnace repairs, electric~ I
33 fac ing the Me;gs tibles
Reo I EStill Gener•l
Noth;ng too large. Also.
992·2054 al Clark's J ewelry work , plumb ing , mobile
Fairgrounds. $4000.00. 992· guns, pocket watches and
Store, Pomeroy , Ohio 45769
home or residence. 992 2571 .
Ho11sing
coin collections. Call 614·
5858.
767 ·3167 or 557·3411 .
CHIP WOOD . Poles max .
SEVERAL. choi ce build ing
Hendq11arters
diameter 14" on largest Will bab ysit In my f1ome
lots, Eastern Distri ct, Tup· 54
Misc. Morchanlso
end . I 12 .50 per ton . Bundled Monday lhrough Friday .
pers Plains-Chester water .
slab . 110 .50 pe r ton . Very chea p. interested in
Owner will help finance .
Denvered to Oh io Pallet doing something more so
992-5869 .
Spill&amp; delivered . 992·5248.
FIREWOOD. $30. load . ,
Co., Rock Springs Rq., than for the money .
Pomeroy 992·2689 .
References. 992 ·2830.
~ 16 E . Second Street
Log
spHtter. $350.00 .
Refrigerator for camper,
IRON AND BRASS BEDS ·
Real Estate
ac and gas, s1s.oo. Also 25
Phone
Old furniture, desks, gold
;nch·3242
color
TV for Sloo.oo .
41
Houses for Rent
882
.
rings , rewelry , silver
H614l -992-3325
dollars, sterling, etc. Wood 31
Six room house and ba th
Homes tor Sale
NEW LISTING - 6
--ice boxes, jars, antiQues.
with uti li ty room . Ci ty
room house on level tot.
etc. complete households. Beaufltul three bedroom
water and gas. $150.00 per
Bath, nat. gas F.A. fur ·
Wr;te : M.O. MHier, Rl . 4, ranch brick home in Baum
S Hp
month w;th S50 .00 depos ;t
nace
,
wood
cabinets
in
Pomero y, OH
45769. Or
Add 1tlon, Pomeroy. Oh io.
TILLER
on Nye Ave . Call
Located
kitchen
,
and
gar~ge .
ca ll992 ·7760.
Gas heat. central a ir . Call
367·7811 .
Only S18.500.
992 ·2571 or 1·687·6429.
NICE Ill EW - 9 acres
New, used, and antique fur 4~2===M;:o::b::;=le::;H:;:o=m
=
es in Pomeroy with view of
niture . No item to large or
the river. Has all city
_ _ _foL_R!!!!___ _
Rose Hill , attra c tive six
to small. Wil l bl!Y one piece room
utilities .
hO!JSe with
a
or co mplele hou seholds. detached
2 bedroom Mobile Home .
HUNTING L.AND garage ,
Mart in's General Store at workshop, tull basem en t.
Adults onl y.
Brown 's
Good location tor hunt·
992-6370.
Trailer Court, Minersv ille .
ing cabin with 14 acr es.
1.12 acres. S5'l ,500. 1-614·
992·3324 .
Lots of game and as
678·25 13.
close to Forked Run
N"ow buying gold and
~--- ----..lake as possible.
si lver, ·Old pecket watches, PR IVATE
For sate or rent : apsett; ng , 3 70
ACRES
ALL
chai ns, diamonds. silv er bedroom home on S. R . 7
prox imately 34 acres with
MINERALS - Leased
money and coins. Martin ' s ncar Memory Gardens. 2112
three bedroom modular
with good wells dril led
Gfneral Store, Middl eport.
home in Portland , Ohio
acres. Ter ms. 992· 77 41.
within one mile . Good
992 6370 .
area . Nine. mil es from the
f ences and several
Ra ve nswood bridge. Ca ll
bu ildi ngs . Bedford
after 5 p.m . at 1 304 273
WANTED to buy : truck
5272. .
.
Township,
load of good top soli . 992·
HARDWOOD
FLOORS
E. Main Sf.
Pomeroy
3288.
- A lovely home with a
family .roo m, 2 bed·
56
Pets for Sale
Handmade quilts : ' in your
rooms, 2 I irepla ces, fu II
--·
----ar ea the week of April 6th .
basement, J lots, and
Come
get
a
beautiful
puppy
Wr ite : Joan Foster, 500
unattached ga rage . This
from
yo ur
Humane
Ea s t
Boundary ,
vou will li ke.
Society . 'All s;zes. labs,
Perry sburg, Oh io43551 ,
TRAILER LOT
collies, poodles, setters
Almost tevel1 2.t.J acres of
land, drilled we ll, Oh io
looking for homes. 992·6160 .
Power . utility bui ldi ng
&amp; pad, on Rt . 124 West.
Two
A !&lt; .C
regisfered
cocker span;el pupp;es.
Ask; ng just S6,500 .
Black lemales. After 6 p.m.
WANT TO KNOW THE
11_ _ H~Wantod
VALUE OF YOUR
ca ll99~ 7-4~ -----PROPERTY? ASKING
-·
, ··-1185.00 to s.sooweekly do;ng
FOR
AN
APPRAISAL
.
mailing work . No ex
WANT TO SELL? ASK
perlc nce re quir ed . A P·
US . CALL 992 ·3176.
PLY : Circle Sales, P.O.
Bo x 22 4· 0 , Richmond Hill,
Housing
61
NY 114 18.

Announcements

3

x .O.L.G.Q ··

National DeMolay Week is being man in Kansas Gity. lt has been terobligatory da ys annually to
E. F . Robinson
recognize and pay tribute to the
observed this .week through March med ageless, and is divided into the
Pres ident
21.
Initiatory and DeMolay Degrees.
public schools, the less fortunate,
131 17, 24, 31 , 3tc
The Initiatory Degree is one of
patriots of the country, parents,
A description of DeMolay is reporone's religious faith, the govern· T --~-------·-·····----------l
.ted in an article released by Fred solenmity and consecration, during
Young, master councilor of the which the initiate dedicates himself
ment , andtheFounderofDeMolay .
to uphold the virtues of filial love,
Anti-drug and ecology programs ,
MeigsChapter,OrderofDeMolay.
fund drives for charity, blood
Buidling better citizens out of reverence, courtesy, comradeship,
teenage boys is the goal of the Order fidelity, cleanness and patliotism. ·
donations , civic service. and safe
of DeMolay, an international youth
The DeMolay Degree is a
driver programs are just a few of the
worthwhile efforts carried out by the
organization founded on March 18, dramatic and historic portrayal of
1919, in Kansas City, Missourt, by the trials, tortures, and martyrdom
young men in individual DeMolay
Frank S. Land and nine teenage of Jacques DeMolay, and teaches a
*1pters. Currently DeMolay is con·
boys.
lesson in fidelity and comradeship.
cerned with clea ning up our en·
The organization was named for
As the officers of a chapter, young
••ironment and making our world a ·
Jacques DeMolay, the last Grand -· men are taught responsibility and - better place to live.
Writ e your own ad 'and order by mail with m 1s
Master of the Knights Templar, who given the opportunity to express
Each chapter is supervised in all
coupon Cance l yo •r ad by phone w hen you get
resu Its. M oney not r ~ fu n dab l e .
was burned at the stake by King themselves before a group of their
of its functions by an adul.t advisory
Phillip of France on March 18, 1314, fellows. Although DeMoley ritual
council. One man is designated llli
as a martyr to loyalty and and meetings are serious and
the official "Chapter Dad" to handle
I
the supervision of chapter meetings
toleration.
reverent, the organization does not
I
I
Today, members of DeMolay advocate any particular creed, but
and to counsel the members.
·
I
strive to carry on the fine ideals for teaches only a profound faith in the
Another helping hand for most
I
which DeMolay gave his life onelivingandtrueGod.
chapters is the Mothers' Clubs.
I
DeMolay has a three-way
These now numnber over 2,000. The
loyalty and service to God and fellow
man.
program designed .to benefit the in·
Mothers' Clubs primarily help the
Pr 1nt one word in ea ch
Frank Land served as the dividual DeMolay, the chapter, and
boys raise money for their activities,
space below . Each in ·
and they usually handle the pur·
it ia l or group of figures
Secretary Generalfor DeMolay until the community.
counts as a word. Count
his death on November 8, 1959. By
Various awards are given to inchase and repair of robes and
name etnd address or
1920, the Kansas City Chapter had dividuals for achievement, and
regalia .
ph one number If used .
grown to 3,000 members, and chap- Merit Bars are awarded for distincDeMolay publis hes an in·
You ' II get beller results
tf you descr ibe tul tv.
ters were soon instituted from coast tion in civic service, athletics, ternationa l magazi ne ca lled the
g ive pr ic !"'. The Senfi net
CORDON, which serves as a
to coast and in several foreign coun- mll'!ic, dramatics, religion, and
reserves th e r igh t to
!lies. Today there are over 2,300 a" other fields . Special recognition is
medium for distributing infonna ton
cla ssi fy , ed if or re jec t
any ad . Your ad will be
live DeMolay chapters and nearly given for blinging in new members.
from international headquarters
p ut in the prope r
three million boys have taken their The Degree of Chevalier is the
and furnishing ideas for chapter acclasif ic ation if you ' ll
highest honor an active DeMolay
tivities:
obligations at lbe DeMolay altar.
check th e pr oper bo x
T/lese cash rates
below
DeMolay membership is open to can receive. It is earned by out·
DeMolay does not attempt to take
include discoun t
any boy of good character who is standing service in a chapter and to
the place of the home or church, but
rather to supplement them. The
between the ages of 13 and 21. fellow DeMolays.
) Wanted
) For Sa le
The top honor in DeMolay is the
organization 's pin rJOse is to off er
Although DeMolay chapters are
17 _ _ __ _ __
) Announ cement
,sponsored only by Masonic bodies or Legion of Honor. This is conferred
young men of toda~ : a wholesome
18. _ _ _ _ _ __
l For Rent
occupation for his spa re time; wor·
individual Masons, it is not on Senior DeMolays, over 311, for out19. _ _..:..__ _ __
necessary that a boy be a son or a standing service to their community
thwhile associates; the best of en20. _ _ _ _ _ _ .1
vironment; and an interesting and
21. _ _ _ _ _ _ 1
relative of a Mason to belong to and their fellow men.
Chapters and individual DeMolays
complete program of all-around
DeMolay.
22 . _ _ _ _ _ __
The Order of DeMoley is a non· are also required to observe certain
youth development.
23. _ _ _ _ _ __
profit corporation with the In24 . _ _ _ _ _ __
ternational Headquarters located in
25 . _ _ _ _ _ __
its own four-story building in Kansas
26 . _ _ _ _ __
City, Missouri. Under the guidance
of the Grand Secretary, a small of28
27 .
29. _ _ _ _ _ __
fice staff acts as the clerical and ad3o. _ _ _ _ _ __
ministrative group to maintain a
ONE
WAY
31.
_ _ _ _ _ __
central office of record and promOte
32.
_ _ _ _ __
the growth and development of the
33.
_
_ _ _ __
organization.
34.
_
_
_ _ _ _ __
The youth movement is governed
42 Epa. Est.
56 Highway
35 _ _ _ _ _ __
by an International Supreme Coun, ANOTHER WAY
cil composed of over 200 outstanding
Masons located around the world.
They meet in annual session to
28 Epa. Est.
42 Highway
review and approve the actions or
DeMolay's Jitual is what sets the
organization apart from other youth
groups. The ritual was written in
1919 by Frank Marshall, a
prominent MI!SOn and newspaper

Wilf care for th e elderly In

.

Order of DeMolay- making better citizens

the staff.

a.m .

Small investment, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads

County Cork and County Clare,
more and more Irish Americans
are " becoming aware of the total
cultural thing. " That's due to
many of the nationality's groups
- like his own Shamrock Club which are striving to show that
there's more to today's St.
Patrick's Day celebration tha n
strutting in green and flashing
shamrocks, he sa1d.

WE CAN SAVE YOU MONEY
ONE WAY OR ANOTHER

I

Social Calendar

ore to Irish than green beer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Because of a growing interest in
ancestry, or perhaps just a bit o'
luck, Irish descendants are learning there's more to today's
celebration than green beer, says
an lliish historian.
"They (llish Americans) are
changing from the sentimental
on~a-year Irishman, mo~ing

loo

9

.

11

DECORATING
SUPPLIES

ANN'S CAKE

~~~vh~~kf;;~~n~~~iN~~

Trash Pickup In
The Village of
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-5016
or 992·7505

DECORATING
SUPPLIES

(oc•red next to Dale
Hill Ford Tractor ;n

Osborn Rd .

Pom~roy .

Reedsville, Oh.

3-tl · l mo.

r~~;===~~~2~2~3=1=m=o~.~~~==~;;.g3·~1~6·~1~m§o~.l~~~~~~~~=~
ll

a1

Home

Home
Improvements

13

Excavatin

Improvements
_
COMPLETE · ~over In·
IWI LL DO ALL kinds of car· Gene's Carpel Clean ;ng, stallation &amp; backhoe ser·
pentry work , including deep stream extra cti on . vi ce for Raci ne-Syracuse
Trucks for Sate
paneling , ceilings, repai rs, Free
est imi!ited , sewer district. Dozer work
1972
GMC p ick up , etc. E~perienced, w ith r easonilble ra1es, scot- if needed. 949·2293 .
automatic. V·B. S300.00. references. Phone992·39.41. chQuard . 992-6309 or 742·
Pnone 985·4395 .
14
Electrical
2211.
Will do Cf'rpenter work and
&amp; Refrigeration
Interior or exterior pain· ifi"-.- -Piumb;ng
73
vans &amp; 4 W.O.
SEWING MACHINE
tlng. Free estimates. CALL
· . &amp; Heating
Repairs , s er vice, all
1978 Ch e\'Y van , she cylin- 992-6190 or 949·2614 .
---·------ WATER
der, power steering, power
WELL S . makesl 992 ·2284. The
Fa bric Shop, Pomeroy.
br ak es. air conditi oning, Frenc h City Paint ing . Do me~t ic and commercial.
tour new 1 1 r~ s . good con· Residential , commerc ial. pump sates and serVice . Authorized Singer Sales
extefio r . T om Lewis
dition. good gas mileage. i nt e r ior ,
Drilling . and Service . We sharpen
Lots ot extras. Phone 742· Spec ial i Zing in Interior Seasona l di scount on pum Scissors.
22 11 daily before 5 or 742· painting, paper hanging &amp; ps . 1·304-895·3802 or 1·304· ELWOOD
BOWERS
textured ceilings. Free 895·3641. .
2201 after 5.
REPAIR
Sweepers,
estimah.!s. 367 ·778.f or 367·
toasters, irons. all small
appliances . Lawn mower ,
1976 Ford 4 x 4 with power 7161k. - - · - Nex1 lo State Highway
steer in g. pow_er brakes, WIL L lay brick, blOCk,
lots of e&gt; lr as. S2600.00. 985 pour concrete , bu ild Dozer work . Smatt jobs a Gar age on Route 1, 985specia lty . 742·2753 .
fireplaces . 304-773·5131.
1825.
4133.

----

. :::.-_-·-==:=:::::::==

The Daily Sentinel
243 IIIS1 17 Sl, Ntw York, NY
10011. Print NAME ADDRESS,
ZIP, SIZE, ond Sl'ILE NUMBER.
We slieamhned lhe seo~ng to
save vou t1me so you can save

money! Send now for NEW 198 l
SPRING-SUMMER PATTERN CAT.
ALOG. l 00 sl)les. lree ~aHe10
coupon. ($2 Value). CataiO(, SI.
u..u qulcll Quilts .... . $1 .75
llJ.fllll1011 HGme Quiltin1 $1.7 5
I JO.Swutm-Sittl 31-56. SUS
129-Qukk/ bsy , .......

us

- -- ~
.. ...,.
·•'

�•

Page-16~ The

Pomeroy

Daily Sentinel

Bugliosi says cult violence still present
ByK.EJVINKELLY
, ~e potenbal for .cults a~d_.their
"'"':e.rs t~;onurut .vt.olence IS v~.'Y
d•tlnltely a posstbthty, according
to the man who helped prosecute
cult leader Charles Manson some 10
years ago.
Vincent Bugliosi, the Los Angeles
prosecuting attorney who gained
national attention during Manson's
sensational trial, shared some
thoughts on the i~ue with a small
audience at Rio Grande College
Monday nighL
" The kids are still out there, under
the guidance of gurus, although
most of those are scoundrels out for
money," Bugliosi noted.
"But the potential is there." he

continued. "I think whal happened
with Manson a~d Jim Jones (of the
ill-fated People s Temple) are reaffinnations of what can happen when
people turn their minds over to a
man or a group-the madness is still
there."
The bulk of Bugliosi's talk was
given over tQ the details of Manson
and his followers, a conununal-type
group known as "the family" and
the severall969 murders they were
later convicted for . One of the victims was actreSS Sharon Tate.
Bugliosi said there were several
factors-which made the more than 30
members of his group follow Manson, including drugs, sex, national
unrest and rebellion against the

(Continued from page I)
company plans handled by private
insurers.
Until now, the pension issue, and
not the production schedules, had
been considered the chief obstacle to
a settlement.
· Gaston said the union negotiators

Pomeroy•••
. (Continued from page 1)
It was suggested that the village
go to a smaller vehicle, however.
Harry Lyons, police chief, suggestefl
the purchase of a similiar tYI&gt;e car
as the present vehicle . He said he
would not recommend a smaller
vehicle.
Anderson also asked council if it
wished to hire Harry Evans, financial advisor, on a full-time or part
time basis or merely as a consultant.
Mrs. Walton will contact Evans on
the cost of each. Whatever action
council takes will be effective April
I.

establishment, but he placed the problems,Bugliosisaid.
at the time. This is a far cry from and is stjll in prison in California.
major e~P.ha~is o~ what he termed
With an inherent ability to Manson, riding down a street, His cchorts in crime were also conM~riSOn s evil gem~.
.
donunate people, aided by drugs and picking victims at random and or- victed, but live in much better conHe had the abthty to discern an isolated lifestyle-not unlike the dering their murders in the most ditions now in prison than they did at
the infamous Spalm ranch, where
what people saw in him, and con- · factors which led to the !978 People's brutal way."
stantly wear many masks to be what Temple massacre in Guyana- ManManson, 46, was convicted in 1!171 the family hung out.
they saw," he noted.
son had almost full control over the
Manson, a Cincinnati native who majority of his followers.
.------------------------once spent some prison time in
During a question and answer
Chillicothe Correctio~al Institute, session, Bugliosi compared the
SHOP
passed himself off to his followers as enigmatic People's Temple leader,
the. second commg .or Jesus Jim Jones, to Manson, ·and noted
ChriSt-although tn reahty he was there were simiiarities but not
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE TRI STATF AREA
an "evil, very sophisticated con many.
'
man.
" He had the chariSma of a Charles
"I'm not sure I have the full an- Manson, " he said. " But Jones
swer--'I have a partial answer-to lacked the classic eviln~ss of ManMonday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday &amp; Saturday
the question, how did this little guy son. When he ordered to kill, his or'
8:30 to S: 00, ~hursday ti1112 noon
who wouldn't step on a flower, yet ders were given on tape, and it was
OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
thought nothing of collUTlitting ran- obvious he was completely unhinged
dom murder, be able to control these
·~ason, w. Va, .
HERMAN GRATE
773-5592
people?" Bugliosi asked.
'·As far as !.could detennine, they
•
actually
thought
he
was
Christ,"
he
Two
suits
for
money
have
been
~========================:.
'd
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas I
sal .
Many of Manson's "family" were Court by Diamond Savings and
not the stereotypical flower children Loan, former Athens County
of the late 1960s, the prosecutor con- Savings and Loan.
tinued, but runaways from middleOne suit in the amount of $22,074.43
class, typically American homes was filed against Philip D. Moxley,
who fell under Manson's and Frances M. Moxley, Pomeroy
spell-something Bugliosi likened to and George Collins as treasurer and
the devotion shown to Adolf Hitler by another in the amount of $24,769.04
hisfollowers.
against James D. McDougal,
Rog. Rot. 12.31
Hitler was one of Manson's Pomeroy, Paul Simon, Pomeroy,
Rog . Rot 11.51
DOUBLE ACTION
political heroes-"a very tuned-in and George Collins as treasurer.
,._
....
CALOONITI
guy''-while the cult leader also
Marriages dissolved were Gary
~
DISHWASHER
used the music of the Beatles as Edwin Snouffer, and Vicki Sue
DITIAOINT
prophecy a racial war was the only Snouffer: Bonnie Freeman and
solution to the world's present Gary Freeman: Mi~e Capehart and
· ·:.··~.~ .~ ··
40
Patricia A. Capehart.

MASON FURNITURE ··

r-------------------------

: Area Death
I

\en~dia

!
I

J\'1. Knight

Venedia M. Knight, 59, Rt. 1, Por!land, died Monday at Holzer
Medical Center.
Mrs. Knight was preceded in
death by her parents, Joseph and
Dessie Stewart Young and her
husband, Otis Knight.
She is survived by two daughters,
Unda Watson and Debi Bradford
both of Portland: five brothers,
George Young , Ashley, Ohio ; James
Young, Apple Grove; Tom Young,
Cheshire; Dallas Young,
Washington C.. H. , and Darrell
Young, Port Williams, Ohio, and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at 10 a.m. at the Bald
Knobs Church with the Rev. James
Cundiff officiating. Burial will be in
Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends may
call at Ewing Funeral home after 7
p.m. this evening.

BABY
r-WITONIS

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

. ..::.
..

•~"~••t•

87e

,~,$119

Rog.

ELBERFELD$

WINDOW

"'•"'

ReQ . Ret. $1 .94

LIQUID
DRANO

.j

IFFIADINT
DENTURE CLEANSER
TABLITS

"~·$109

j

SHADES

Bill Young asked if bids for winterization of the former Pomeroy
Senior High have been advertised.
Mayor Andrews said bids were to
Visit Elberfelds Home Furnishings
be published March 14, however,
Department on the 1st Floor for A Comnothing has materalized as yet.
Larry Wchrung, councilman.
plete Selection of Window Shades for
reported he had been notified by
Your Home or Office. All Sizesand the
Paul Gerard, president of the Meigs
DEPUTIES
~ROBE
TiiEFT
County Jaycees. that the Jaycess
Best Colors.
The Meigs Cowity Sheriff's Deparare dropping proposed plans to hold
a carnival on the upper parking lot bnent is inves,tigating the theft of a
Ask to See Our Room Darkening Shades
log chain, battery charge r, hedge
during the Big Bend Regatta .
and the New Scalloped Styles.
Wehrung noted · that Gerard had trimmer. gasoline and a five pound
roll
of
cheese
from
the
Chester
Fire
received complaints from several of
We Will Cut Window Shades to Your
the merchants voicing thei r Department.
Measure, Free of Charge.
The incident occurred sometime
dissatisfaction in using the lot for the
between
Thursday
and
:'Ytondal'
carnival. The carnival will be held
THIS IS THE FINAL WEEK OF OUR
·
behind the junior high building as in night.
WALLPAPER SALE. SAVE 20% ON
the past.
CLARIFICATION
All WALLPAPER.
Council voted :;.1 not to give the
Donald
Roush,
Syracuse,
who
for·
Jaycess permission to sell beer bv
SALE END
AT MAR. 21
the cup on the parking lot. Bill feit ed $350 in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews recently
Young abstained.
on
a DWI charge, is not Donald
Betty Baronick, council woman,
Roush,
Snowball Hill , Syracuse.
said complaints are still being
received on the vandalism occurring r-----------__j--------------------------1
at the mini-park . .
Young suggested that the park be
properly lighted and patroled to cut
down on the vandalism.
Council voted to close the park at
dark. It was suggested that the park
was to be palroled and anyone found
loitering be asked to leave. It was indicated that an ordinance conl.i'olling loitering at the park will be
drawn up.
Harold Brown, councilman, asked
- - ....---FRIDAY SPECIAL--]Q~
about the progress on the cleaning of
village streets. Mayor Andrews
Salad Bar, Ham Steak,
reported new brooms had arrived
and cleaning will begin soon. It was
Vegetable, Potato, Soft Drink,
also reported that the sewers in the
village had been cleaned.
Plus Tax
Meeting with council was Phil
Harrison, president of the Little
League Association, Pomeroy Youth
Club, who sought financial support.
Council approved a $000 donation
for the program.
The mayor's report, showing
receipts in the amount of $!, 706, was
approved.
'
The police department for the past .
two weeks made 2li arrests, received
214 calls and drove 2,468 miles.
Council went on record commending those merchants who have
, cleaned the street in from of their
business establishments.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

,,,$129
Re~ .

Reo . Ret. S2.75

~ -T'

0

,. . 89C

$149

t .... in
pack

..

6-ol.

Entertainment
rfriday &amp; Saturday

Rag . .Ret $1 .12

SOFT
&amp;DRY

.t.N TI · PE"SPIRANl · 80

0 1I

99
6·01

Ae;. Ret. 87•
)

~

~

IWIITHIAAT
OtiHWAIHINQ
DITIAOINT
,~

PADS

..59c

.,.93C
Reo Ret. 12 .77

A fRill
NASAL
SPRAY

Ah'in
, ,

..

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., .,$153
REG. RET . 76'

BAYER
ASPIRIN
FOR CHILDREN

iJ

2 Sections, 14 Pages

ri hied 1981

AE.G. RET . SIV ,I$

FLUORIGARD
DENTAL
RINSE
20'

GEORGIE
1400 WATT TURBO

ToDAY

•• ~I.N· THEW

Carson blasts Enquirer too
LOS ANGELES ~ Just hours after. entertainer Carol Burnett took
the witness stand to charge that a National Enquirer item about her
was "a pack oflies," comedian Jolmny Carson denounced an Enquirer
article about him as "scurrilous" and said the publication "stinks."
"I'm going to call the National Enquirer and the people who wrote
this 'liars,"' Carson said during Tuesday night's broadcast of the
"Tonight Show." He was referring to a cover story in the Enquirer
that said his third marriage was breaking up.

Alleged rape victim dies
CINCINNATI - Children's Hospital has reported that a J().year-old
boy who told police he was raped March 1 by a man wearing a white
medical coat has died of chronic lung disease.
The boy. who was considered a terminal patient when he said he was
sexually assaulted, died Monday afternoon, a spokesman said.
A 24-year-old University of Cincinnati medical student from Park ·
Hills, Ky., ls free on $2li,OOO bond in connection with the incident.

Sheriff's deputies suddenly sick
CHARDON, Ohio - Employees of the Geauga County Sheriff's
Department have been calling in sick, apparently protesting drastic
slashes in funding and personnel imposed by the county's commissioners, Sheriff James Todd said .
The sickout began Tuesday and includes the 16 deputies and eight
other employees, Tddd said.
Conunissloners voted Monday night to cut $38,000 from the departrnent's I981 budget and lay off 17 employes effective March 31.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The winning nwnber selected Tuesday night in the
Ohio Lottery 's daily game "The Nwnber" is 322.
The reported earnings of $472,258 from the wagering on the drawing.
Lottery officials said sales prior to the drawing totaled $1.009,497.00,
and h!&gt;lders of winning tickets are entitled to share ~7.239.00.

Weather
Cloudy tonight and Thursday with a chance of.snow flurries . Lows
tonight in the mid-20s. Highs Thursday J&gt;40. Chance of precipitation
30 percent tonight and Thursday. Winds northeasterly !().!5 mph
tonight.
Extended Ohio ForecastFriday through Sunday:
A chance of snow flurries Friday and Saturday and over the east
half Sunday, Highs In the low to mld-308 Friday and Saturday and In
the 30s north to low 40s south Sunday. Lows at night In the m1d-teeos to
low ZGs.

REAGAN GOES TO HILL - President Ronald ~agan went to
Capitol Hlll Tuesday seeking support for his bUdget cuts. From left are
House Minority Leader Robert H. Michel of illinois; President Reagan;

...,$149

$11 99

More intense wrangling was anticipated today with consideration of
cut.s in a variety of social service
payments - food stamps, Medicare,
Medicaid and Social Security - and
other popular programs surh as
housing assistance and urban mass
transportation payments.

WASHINGTON !AP) - With a
sympathetic Republican majority
providing the muscle, President
Reagan 's ·proposals for slashing
billions of dollars in fl&gt;deral spending are rolling through the Senale
Budget Conunittee with only minor
changes.

representative.
The sheriff also reported that he
received a check from Gallia County
fur housing prisoners. He said the
check would be placed into the county's general fund. Proffitt requested
it be certified and appropriated back
into his budget.
In other activities, Phil Roberts,
county engineer, made a verbal
reconunendation that the board accept Happy Hollow Raod (T-174N) in
Rutland Township and Syracuse
Flood Road (T-123) in Sutton Township as part of the county highway
system.
Roberts will submit a formal writ-

Meigs County sheriff's deputies
have agreed to become unionized .
This was the report given to the
Meigs County Board of Commissioners Tuesday by Sheriff
James J. Proffitt.
Proffitt also saidhe would be
meeting today with a union

Miners at the Southern Ohio Coal
Co. Raccoon Mine Nwnber 3 in Vinton County walked off their jobs
today to show their dissatisfaction
with the progress of contract
negotiations ..
The job action by 45o miners shortly after midnight at the Vinton
County mine was unauthorized,
UMW Local 1~7 Secretary Larry
Birchfield said. He said a meeting
would be held today with the miners
to urge them to return to their jobs.
Meanwhile, leaders of the United
Mine Workers District 6 in Ohio and
northern .West Virginia said
Tuesday that a strike seetrn
inevitable and that their members
will support a walkout on March 27
to press demands on three key
issues.
District 6 President Ed Bell said
today he knew of no other wildcat
walkouts within the district. point,"
said John Prout, District 6 vice
president, in a telephone interview
Tuesday night from district
headquarters in Dllles Bottom.
"They might settle the contract next
week, but because they've missed a
deadline, there will be a strike. We
just can't predict I1ow long it · wlll

CO ~IUJI!EII

!!EIA lt

Wlf!-1 COUf' O I.

OLD SPICI

MI~{·~ADS fi LOTiON
"

a ·~ ··a··~·.,.. .

-·~·~··~··~~~~~~-REG . flf.T 11 32

RENUZIT "'
SPRAy · cocoa·
AIR FRESHENER

~·.:"i'""'"c"

'

......;;;;;..........,;,;...;::;....:;;,.~

"••o • ooov

L08T19
0~

=-=--

~~~~·
·

TIME RELEASE
CAPSULE
REDUCING PLAN

UI Y POWDI- 10 OH

. . 'I"

You must be 21 or accompanied
by parent or legal guardian.

COCOA BUTTER

PERMATHENE-12

. .lNTI-PUSPIR.t.NT

Pomeroy, Oh.

ROYAL

REO . AET . 14 .41

RET U 12

RI.IIT
GUAIID
Q•

/Nil "VI

-

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.,

....

,
' ....

.•

....$249
"•" \
. ........ . ;..!

DUTTON DRUG CO.
N

But during Tuesday's 11-hour
work session, the panel's
Republican majority was able to
overcome any Democratic ~
position and the $12.5 billion in approved cuts exceeded the adtninistration's reconunendations in
some cases.

Sen. Pete V. Domenici, R-N.M.,
the conunittee chainnan, said
Congress is "going to have to make
all .the cuts the president proposed
($48.6 billion) and then some" to
meet his goal of balancing the
federal budget by 1984.
(Continued on page 14)

Meigs County sheriff's deputies join union

AEG RET . S3 JO

llf(,

Senate Majority Leader Howard Baker, Jr., of Te~essee; and Senator
Pete V. Domenicl, R-N. M., chairman of the Senate Budget Commltlee.
(AP Laserphoto). (See AP AAA wire story I.

Reagan's proposals roll through committee

HAIR DRYER
ll 00

OFF

THE MEIGS INN

IS Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspa er

ten reconunendation to be acted Township residents, requested a
upon by the commissioners at the bridge on T-37 near their home be
repaired.
next weekly meeting.
The commissioners said they
The board received a petition from
the congregation of Mt. Union Chur- would accompany the engineer to inch to have county road 10 from coun- spect the condition of the bridge.
Bill Lyons, Mary Annn Wymer
ty road 17 to the church blacktoped.
Commissioners forwarded the and Naoma Brinker, CETA,
representative , discussed the
peti,ion to the county engineer.
Commissioners and county payment of unemployment comengineer Roberts signed an pensation benefits for CETA em·
agreement with Colwnbia Gas ployes.
Attending were Henry Wells,
Corp., granting permission for the
gas company to install a two inch president, Richard Jones and Dave
gas pipeline under and across coun- Koblentz, cmrunissioners, Mary
Hobstetter, clerk and Martha Cham·
ty road 14 in Bedford Township.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Green, Salem bers.

Raccoon mine hit by walkout

REG RET SUJ

~EG

A new coal strike probably would
have much Jess imjlact on the
economy than the protracted
walkout of the winter of 19'17-78,
which precipitated mass layoffs and
some power cutbacks in the coaldependent Midwest.
Electric utilities, major purchasers of union-mined coal, are
believed to have a 90-day stockpile,
and the winter heating season ill .
nearing its end.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesda , March 18,1981

(] •:: ~.~' $279

RE G REI "

negotiators staying in Washington
would contact industry representatives to see if there was any
change in their position. The BCOA's
three-man negotating team,
however, went home.
There was no indication the
Reagan administration would in·
tercede in the bargaining, and UMW
officials maintained they didri 'I
want any involvement by the government.

le

en tine

at

FRAMES

----------~~~~~--_.-........,_
St 19

I

Co

Callen S8id there could be no extension of the March 'l:T contract
deadlioe but that a settlement
reached before then would mean a
short-lived strike.
Callen said there remained an
"outside chance" that the two sides
coWd return to the bargaining table,
and Church said a key core of union

... 43C

BEVERAGES
SERVED

)

Vo1.29,No. 233

miners.

•

e

Inevit

ratification by the 3~member
bargaining council and rank-and-file

tant to say what went wrong, union
negotiator Paul Gaston of Kentucky
said industry-sought changes in
work rules were the hangup.
The two sides also were far apart
on wages and benefits and industry
propo!181B for overhauling the pension plan.
UMW spokesman ,Eldon C8llen
said a strike at 12:01 a.m. EST on
March 'l1 is unavoidable, given ' the
union 's 10-day process for

•

•

~EG .

I

. .,~.89C

,.~1'2

Phone 992-3629

Reo . Ret. $4,12
or PO\NDEREO

Ill

RAGU
SPAGHITTI
SAUCI
PLAIN or WITI-1 MEA f

LEGAL NOTICE

ALL LEGAL

Rei. S 1.39

EA~ SP~ AY

CRANBIRRY
JUICI
COCKTAIL

MilANO
ILL
MEDICATED DISPOUBLE
DOUCHE

WEEKEND AT MEIGS INN

The Public Utilities Com·
mission of Ohio ha s set
for public hearing Case
No . 8H·E L- EFC , to
review !he fuel procure·
men! practices and poll ·
cies ol The Ohio Power
Company . the operation
of its Electric Fuel Com ponenl Clause, and related
matters . This hearing is
scheduled to begin at
t :00 p.m. on Monday .
March 23 . 1981 . at the
City Counc11 Chambers .
218 Cleveland Ave . s.w.
Canton. Ohio 44702 .
All interested pa rties will
be given an opportunity
to be heard·. Further 1ntor·
mation may be obtained
by contacting the Com·
mission .
THE PUBLIC UTILI TIES
CDMMISSION OF OHI O
By Dav1d M. Pol k.
Secretary

''lks Tuesday in the quest for their
· irst strike-free settlement since
!964.
UMW Presidert Sam Church
declared that the indll8try representatives were not interested in goodfaith bargaining, and he sent members of the uilion's bargaining council home. The BCOA countered that
it was willing to return to the
bargaining table for "serioll8" talks.
Although both sides were reluc-

k

WlS See money

also feel the industry's wage-andbenefits package •· is inadequate at
this time" but predicted that issue
would not be dealt with until there is
"some movement" on the issue of
production schedules.
"

WASHINGTON (AP) - A national
coal strlk~ appears inevitabl :
foUowing collapse of ccntract talks
between the induatry and the United
Mine Workers. But it may be much
shorter and less disruptive than the
record 111-ilay walkout three years
ago.
Negotiators for the 160,000member Wlion and the Bitwninous
Coal Operators Association, the indll8try bargaining agent, broke off

'MASON FURNITURE

S .

Talks reach

~oal strike sai

Tuesday. March 17,1911

Middleport, Ohio

-

MIIHliii'OI!I

OttiO

A NEW BROOM SWEEPS CLEAN- Roy Brunty,
an employee of the Pomeroy Street Department, tries
out our of tlw new brooms purchased by Pomeroy

______,,

...

&lt;.'.~'~

.l' t ,

..,.

., ~ ·,·

be."

.f~"" .-t '·,,,

District 6 includes 15,000 miners in
42 h&gt;eals Ohio and northern West
Virginia. About 5,000 of those members are laid off, many because of
ft!deral air re~ulations l&gt;reventing

VIllage Council. The streets In the vlllage will be
rleaned soon by street employes. Following the
sweeping of the streets eounrll has htdkated that the
strcrL~ wlll be hosed down.
'

'

the burning of high sulfur coal.
Contract talks between the UMW
bargaining co uncil and the
Bituminous Coal Operators
Association broke down Tuesday ,
and UMW President Sam Church
sent the union's negotiators home .
The current pact for the nation's
160,000 United Mine Workers expires
March 'l:T. UMW officials had hoped
to end talks by early Tuesday to
allow 10 days for the ratification
process.
That deadline died, however, as
talks stalled over issues such as
elimination of the Arbitration
Review Board. The board 's
elimination was mandated at the
UMW's national convention In
December 1979.
" From what we understand, the
three ·issues that they're having
problems with are the Arbitration
Review Board, the leasing of coal
lands and the pension situation,"
Prout said. He had just spoken by
telephone with District 6 President
Ed Bell, a member of the bargaining
council. Bell was returning to Ohio
from Washington, D.C., Tuesday
night and was unavailable for comment.
Steve Kubic. safety officer for
Disti·ict 6, said the arbitration
review bOard is the appeals "court"
for rulings already affirmed by arbitrators In labor disputes.
· " When the eompanies appeal to

- -- ·--·---

the board, about 85 percent of the
rulings in favor of the miner or the
UMW are reversed," he said. 11 The
union definitely wants the board
eliminated."
Kubic said the union also is
fighting a BCOA propollal to allow
companies to lease coal reserves to
mining operators who won't honor
the UMW contract.
'' If you take a company like Consol (Consolidation Coal Co. of Pjttsburgh), you're talking about vast
coal reserves, " he said.
The BCOA proposal would allow
individual coal companies to set up
their own pension plans through
private insurers rather than under
the present multi-employer system. ,
"It (the pact) is just a
smokescreen so the companies can
get around the federal pensioo
laws," said Jim Russell of Scio, a
member of the District 6 executive
board. "If a little company goes out
of business, the miners would lose
their pensions entirely."
The union an&lt;l the coal industry
have not reached agreement without
a strike since 1964. Mines were shut
for a record lll days before the
present three-year pact was signed
in !978.
Recalling that lengthy ordeal,
major users of coal such as utilities
reportediy have stockpiled up to 90
days of the.ore.

..

·I

''

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