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WINTHROP
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.a t

en tine
New agreement could
Voi.29,No. 234
Copyriphted 1911

5TA~ LI~HT,.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, March 23, 1981

I Section, 10 P•gH 15 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Ntwtear

shorten coal strike
.· WHY WOuLO ANY!50Dt WANT
"TO WISH R:R
A \J.IO(:;!N\ ~ .
•

Ed Su llivao

Priscilla's Po
IT~ MY

HCSBY.

WASIDNGTON (AP) - Ccal in·
dustry and union negotiators an·
nounced today they have reached
tentative agreement 9n a new threeyear contract.
"We have a settlement," United
Mine Workers President Sam Chur·
ch exclaimed to reporters at the
hotel where bargaining took place.
Church w.as accompanied by B.R.
Brown, head of the Bltwninous Coal
Operators Association team of
negotiators.
.
The settlement, which now must
be approved by the UMW's 39-

member bargaining council and the
union's 160,000 · members, would
shorten - but not avert - a nationwide coal strike at 12:01 a.m. EST
Friday.
The tentative settlement will be
sent to the union's rank-and-file
1niners in Eastern and Midwestern
coal fields if approved by the
bargaining council, which was summoned to Washington Sunday by
Church.
It was believed the council would
take up the proposed contract later
in the morning.

REACH AGREEMENT - Shortly after thta AP wire photo was
taken, negolialors Walter Suba, and UMW President Sam Church, right,
annouuced agreement bad been reached on a new tbree year contract.
The settlement, wblch now must be approved by tbe UMW's ~member
bargainiDg council and the unlon's 160,000 members, would shorten but
not avert a naUonwlde coal strike all2:01 q.m. Friday.

ToDAY

•·•• IN THEW

Birth, death rates increase
WASHINGTON - The birth rate and the death rate both rose in the
United States last year, a new government report says .
The birth rate rose 3 percent to 16.2 births for each 1,000 people, the
National Center for Health Statistics reported Sunday. The 3.6 rnillion
births during the year amounted to 69.2 for each 1,000 women in ·the
' childbearing years 15 to 44.
The death rate increased 2.3 percent to 8.9 deaths for each 1,000
people, with increases in the rates for influenza and related illnessess,
heart disease, cancer and murder.

Iranian student free ~m bond
WASHINGTON - All Iranian student at American University in
Washington is free on bail on firearms charges after his arrest near a
motorcade of Vice President George Bush.
The student, Kaveh Sotouden o.f Falls Church, Va ., 27, was arrested
Saturday near the Chain Bridge over the Potomac River after Secret
Service agents with Bush spotted a rnan carrying a rine with a
. telescopic sight, police Said. The rifle and a pistol, both .22-caliber,
were confiscated and Sotouden, who told officers he was on his way to
"shoot at some cans," was charged with carrying a deadly weapon
and an unregistered pistol.

Pair face muder charges
UMA, Ohio - Lima police hllve caught and charged two men sought
in the March 15 slaying of three people and the attempted killing of a
fourth .
Inspector Anthony Depalma said Lawrence Daniel, 30, was arrested
Sunday morning and Carlos Ridley, 29, turned ltirnself in at police
headquarters Sunday afternoon.
The two were chargt'd with aggravatt'tl murder and attempted
aggravated murder in the slayings of 51-year-old Pelhllm Thurkill, his
47-year-old wife, Sarah, and their 4-year-old granddaughter LatrirlB
Jones.

Doctor files libel suit
"I CALL IT 'PORK AND'BEANS ALA BUOOET'I"

COLUMBUS, Ohio - A Colwnbus doctor has filed a $1.9 million
lawsuit in Franklin County Conunon Pleas Cuurt, claiming he was
maliciously libeled in The Colwnbus Dispatch Sunday Magazine.
Dr. Harold Jennings Wilson filed the suit against the magazine and
The Dispatch Printing Co.
Wilson and his Wilson Medical Center Inc. of Colwnbus claimed in
the suit that in the magazine's March I edition he was libeled in a story
entitled "Is Your Doctor Telling You The Truth, So Help Your
Health?"
The article quoted another doctor as talking about "a Colwnbus doc·
tor accused of qua ckery" before the Ohio State Medical Board.

Weatht•r
Mostly clear tonight. Lows in the low 30s. Muslly sunny Tuesday.
Highs in the low to rnid-50s. Probability of precipitation 10 percent
tonight and near zero percent Tuesday. Winds northerly to northwesterly 10 mph or less tonight .

"YOU THINK INILA_TION AND AECEUION AAE
THE BIOGEST PRoa&amp;.EMS? IQUE88 YOU NEVEA
CAMEUtAGAINST37TNIIW '·

,,'

"GOOD N&amp;WS!ITONLYOOST •• 78 TO FILL THI£
TODAY!~ IS DOWN TWO CENTS AGALLON!''

E1tended Ohio FurecasiWedaesday through Friday:
Fair wltb a warutln&amp;trend tbrougb tbe period. HJghs in the 5011 Wed·
naday, warming to tbe upper 5011 and~ by Friday. Morul"')low•ln
the 30s Wednesday , warming to tbe mld-:108 lu low 40o by Friday mol'

Dlng.

.,

.

Church said a contract was
desperately needed because "our
people must not suffer," but, when
asked what led to the breakthrough,
said, " I'm not going to get into
details of the language of the contract before the bargaining council
has a chance to
it." . .
A protracted strike seemed certain when talks broke off last week.
Church steadfastly sought to get industry bargainers back to the table
through . telephone conversations
over the weekend, but the industry's
position had been that there was lit·
tie point to reswning negotiaitons
unless there was some movement in
the positions.
The two sides went to the table at
I : 4~.a.m. today and announced their
tentative agreement a little more
than five hours later.
But Church did say that the
union's existing multi-employer pension fund would be retained and that
the industry had ended its efforts to
put mines on a seven-day work
schedule.
Union sources said Friday thllt the
industry was willing to 'refer to further study its proposal · that the
present pension fund be replaced by
company-by-company plans.
The industry sought a seven-day
production schedule with miner5
given the option. of not working on
Sunday. The union had said it would
accept that schedule - but only if
work on both Saturday and Sunday
were made optional. Under the

see

current contract, miners can be
compelled to work Saturday overtime.
On the pension fund issue, Church
had said before today's talks that the
industry negotiators were continuing to demand the union
relinquish the provision, first
negotiated in 1964, requiring the
BC&lt;JA's 130 companies to pay
roughly $1.90 a ton to the union's
health and retirement funds for each
ton of non-union coal purchased.

Jack Perry, vice president of the
UMW's District 17 in Charleston,
W.Va. , and one of the union
negotiators, said Sunday, "This is
premature of me to say, but the
bargaining council would only be
called back .to consider a contract."
As recently as Friday, Church
said it appeared a long strike was in
the offing, perhaps longer than the
16-week walkout of three years ago.
He urged the more than 12,000
rniners staging wildcat strikes in
eastern and midwestern coalfields
to return to their jobs until the contract expired, saying they would
need to sa v~ every dollar they could.
Church said at the time that when
he last talked by phone with Brown,
the industry negotiators were
demanding that tbe UMW make a
key concession before bargaining
could reswne .

PLEASED MINER- 0. J. Tolbert of Deep Water, W.Va.,. beams as
he leaves work Monday morulng from the Carbon Fuel Co. mine In
Wlulfrede, W. Va. Tolbert had just learned of a tentative agreement
reached between the Uoled Mine Worken and the coal industry for a new
contract. He said he was particularly pleased about early reports tbat tbe
union had won Its battle to keep the mines closed on Sundays. "Since .
there ain't no seven days; II sounds pretty good," he said. (AP l..asel'
photo).

Reagan pOstpones Salt talks
WASHINGTON lAP)
The
Reagan administration is postponing technical talks with the
Soviet Union on living up to the
original SALT treaty while taking a
first step toward new negotiations on
nuclear anns control in Europe.
Administration officials Said Sunday night that the lack of someone to

Investigate
complaints
Ken McLaughlin. Pomeroy. infunned the sheriff's department
Saturday at noon that his son's Honda motorcycle was missing .
The vehicle had been found earlier
Saturday morning by the Mason
County Sheriff's Department. It had
been wrecked.
Pauline Cunningham, Minersville
informed the sheriff's department
Sunday morning that a person or
persons had thrown eggs against her
front window during the night . Both
incidents are under investigation.
Jerry Stone, 23, Rt. I, Rutland,
was at the home of his sister, Enterprise, Saturday when he reportedly shot hi1nself in the head.
The sheriff's department responded as well as the Pomeroy ER
squad. Stone was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital for treatment.
Stone was transferred to an
Athens Hospital Sunday

Commission
to discuss
land usage
Plans for use of county-owned land
between Mulberry and Union
Avenues in Pomeroy will be
discussed at a public meeting to be
held at.J p.m. Wednesday in the jury
room of the Meigs County Cour·
!house.
The Meigs County Commissioners
have scheduled the meeting to
discuss three alternative concept
plans which have been prepared to
show possible development of the
· land over Ure next five years or
longer.
The r·econunended land uses in. dude congregate housing, a convenience store. low-income public
housing, a county park , a
recreational activities complex. and
a single housin!J subdivision .
Conunenls and questions on the
meeting may be directed to C. F:.
Blakeslee, executive diredor· of th~
Mel~s County Regional Plannin~
Conunlssion, 992-2304.

head the U.S. delegation and a need
for further preparation necessitated
a postponement of .the SALT review,
which ·had quietly been planned to
begin Wednesday in Geneva.
"It's not a major, substantive
development, " said one official. who
asked not to be identified. He explained that Robert Buchheim, who
had headed the U.S. delegation,
resigned at the end of the Carter administration and has yet to be
replaced .
The'two sides have met twice a
year since former President Nixon
and Soviet leader Leonid I.
Brezhnev si~ned the treaty al a

Moscow swrunit in 1972, ·placing
restrictions on some nuclear
weapons systems.
The meetings provide a forum for
exchanging complaints about
possible violations and other
technical information.

While this week's SALT session
has been postpnned, sources here
said the Reagan administration has
agreed to send a delegation to
Brussels later this month to map
plans with West European allies on
redudng nuclet~r misslles in
Europe.
U.S. officials are cautioning,
howev~r. that negotiations with the

Soviets may not even start by the
end of the year.
• Heading the U.S. delegation to
Brussels is Lawrence Eagleburger,
acting assistant secretary of state
for Europe, who concurs in the administration 's hard line toward the
Soviets.
Even while considering anns control talks, the administration is
moving ahead with plans to deploy
nuclear missiles aimed at the Soviet
Union. The Pershing and cruise
ntissiles will be deployed beginning
in 1983 in Britain, West Germany
and Italy .

Reedsville girl in good condition
A 16-year-old Reedsville girl was
hospitalized following a one-car
crash in Meigs County Saturday
night.
Lena K. Sampson was listed in
good condition this morning in
Holzer Medical Center.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio
Highway Patrol said Sampson was
westbound on SR 248 at 7:50 p.m.
when she lost control on a curve,
went off the left side of the road and
collided with an embankment.
Also injured was a passenger,
Kathy Ritchie, 15, Long Bottom.
Both were taken by the Meigs EMS
to HMC , wh~re Ritchie was treated
and released for cuts.
. Sampson is being treated for a
fractured jaw and cuts, according to
a hospital spokesman. Damage to

her-vehicle was heavy .
when Waugh passed Jones and then
The patrol investigated another in- . abruptly stopped.
jury accident in Meigs County early
Both cars collided, suffering
minor damage.
Sunday morntng .
Troopers. reported Jerry A.
According to the report, Carl R.
Alley, 21, Rt. 2, Racine, was south· Ramey, 32, Huntington, W.Va., was
bound on SR 124 when his vehicle northbound on SR 553 at 2:20 p.m.
went off the left side of the road, hit Sunday when his car struck a hole in
three mailboxes. collided with an the road, causing minor damage.
embankment and overturned.
Two car-deer accidents were aiso
Alley was not treated at the scene, reported over the weekend . .
the report said .. His auto suffered
Plez Clevinger, 66, Rt. I, Bidwell,
heavy damage.
was northbound on Gallia CR 49 at
The patrol investigated some 3:15 p.m. when his car struck and
other minor accidents over the
killed a deer, causing moderate
damage.
weekend.
Vehicles driven by LyQn Jones, 25,
Edson Brace, 61, Racine, was
Rt. 2, Crown City, - and Teny N.
westbound nn SR 338 at 4:25 p.m.
Waugh, 22, also Rl, 2, Crown City, Saturday when a deer was killed in a
were both southbound on SR 7 in collision with his vehicle. Damage
Gallia County at 10 p.m. Saturday was minor, the report said.
I

,........ l

--- -----·-----...,.,~-........

'

.w

,J '•

r-: -~
HEAVY DAMAGE- The bome of WUllam Justis,
Mluersvllle, received beavy damage as the result of
beillll struck by an unldenlilled driver of a Pinto &lt;'ar
Saturday atll: 50 p.m. The unldentlfled driver was nor·
thbound on Minersville Hill Road when he went off the
road on the right. struck a mailbox owned by Harry
Wyatt. •kidded sideways and went off the road
backwards, struck a tree, fence and the porch at the
JusUs reslden•·•· The vehicle immediately continued

on at a high rate of speed. The Meigs Cowity Sheriff's
Department reports II believes there Is damage to the
Iron! and rear end of the vehicle. The trackl ol the
vehicle were lost in the Murulng Star area. The Jusllo
lamlly was out at bome at tbe Ume of the aeeldeal.
Paneling in the living room was reported damaged as a
result of tbe incident. Anyone havl"') any lnformaUOD
is asked to call the sberlff'ltlepartment.

- - - - -- -r--

�Pomerov-Middleport, Ohio

Commentary
I have in hand two letters, one
· from a brilliant young scientist, the
Second from the president of a major
scientific institut,e, expressing a
joint concern that Mr. Reagan may
deal lightly with. the whole field of
science. My own education in science is so embarrassingly inadequate I
feel with special keenness the
obligation to pass along their concern, even if J am incompetent to
evaluate it.
I gather that Mr. Reagan's delay
in naming a presidential science advisor has suggested to many members of the scientific community that
in fact he had no intention to
reviving the office. That he might
fail to do so generates this concern,
and indeed James R. Killian Jr.,
who was the first full-time scientific
advisor to a president, has written
(in the New York Times) to sound
the alarm.
A little background: In 1954,
President Eisenhower felt the need
for a systematic scientific review of
matters that presented problems of
public policy. So he did the kind of
thing that Governor Reagan greatly
enjoyed and profited frtm doing
when he was chief executive of the
state of California . President
Eisenhower established a volunteer
body- called the President's Scien- ·
tific Advisory Committee (PSAC).
Its 18 members met for two days
every month and also presided over
special panels instructed to inquire
into special topics, for instance the

Strategic Military Panel, or the
Military Aircraft Panel, Space
Technology, World Food, Oceans
and Atmospheres. One of my
correspondents, who served on the
panel, advises me that i~ participants gave themselves enthusiastically to their work ; that in
this own case, although formally
committed to spending only two
days a month, he found his membership in the PSAC taking very
nearly half his time.
When in 1957 the Russians launched Sputnik there was panic in the .
land, and good and bad things were
done in order to overtake what thepublic perceived as a sudden ·scientific breakthrough by the , Soviet
Union. The federal governffient got
into the business of subsidizing
education, and of course before long
it was paying education bills not only
for the young Einsteins of this world,
but for young basketball players.
One salutary development,
however, was the designation of a
full-lime special assistant to the
president for science_ and
technology. This job President
Eisenhower persuaded Mr. Killian,
then serving as president of MIT, to
take. To quote Mr. Killian, the
president desired " unbiased
techni,eal expertise to reassure the
nation about its technological future
and to reach wise policy decisions on
space, weapon systems, disar·
rnament and the maintenance of
American leadership in scien~e."

Ill ( 'uurt St n•t•l
Ptlmt•nn.Ohio

&amp;14-99!-2156
DE \ IHJ-:U TO TH E I NH~ K EST IIF TilE MEIGS· Mr\ SIJ\l AHt:r\

ROBERT L. WINGEIT
l'u blisht·r

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

A!islsLant Publisht'r/Cuntr•)lh·r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

.·

.~ I' \\ ~

f. ditnr

A MEMBER nf Tht&gt; .b sudat t'd Prt'lli~ . Inland lJai\\ Prt'b A~""'''' ia t ltm and thl:'
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'""~lit'~&gt;,

The office, which in due course
became simply the Office of the
Science Advisor to tbe President
gave what in hindsight we consider
to have been !llrategically brilliant
advice on such matters as the
development of our ballistic missile
program, the Polaris submarine, the
moon launch, the development of the
U-2 jet. The office continued until the
days of President Nixon, who
decided that the director of the
National Science Foundation could
serve the twin function of guiding
the foundation and advising the
president.
In the opinion of Mr. Killian the
division of responsibility was
castrating, and served in the best interest of neither the foundation nor
the president. President Ford knew
that something was wrong, and
proposed - and got passed - a bill
establishing the National Science
and Techriology Policy Organization
and Priorities Act of 1976, which
legislation is alive today and could
serve as a legislative scaffolding for
a national s~ience advisor. But only
such as person as that, close to the
president and charged with assembling all relevant information in
helping inform the president so as to
permit him intelligently to adjudicate disputes within his own
community on matters of scientific
implication - only such a person
can give the chief executive the help
he needs.
Particularly at a moment in the
country's history when it is widely

suggested that our leadership in
science- and technology - is gone,
that something happened to atrophy
our scientific genius.
Not so: but those who believe it
have frightening data they can adduce in support of their point. A
president's science advisor is not a
lobby "for" science. He is a scientist
- not a technician - who recognizes
that science is not an
but an

investment, that science has a great·
deal to contribute not merely in the
design of weapons but in the
assimilation ol data needed to make
intelligent recommendations in matters of social policy.
As is always the case, exploiters of
federal involvement in science have
built up a
and looking
at its swollen
'President
Reagan's natural
is to ·

MEL WEESE
MVPWinner

.: The only investment
with a fireplace
'

••

The median price of existing single-family homes rose 11.7 percent in
1980, or I .8 points less than the consumer price index, and that , it is
claimed, proves housing no longer is a good investment.
The figures are welcomed by some claimants, among them brokers
who maintain that stocks and bonds are the only investments for the
masses, and authors who forecast a coming collapse in real estate prices.
But claims are claims, and on examinaton some claims hold up poorly,
,l such as the claim that the world is flat and the earth is the center of the
-!• universe, and that the dollar is as good if not better than gold.
It is no news to anyone exc-ept perhaps some investment analysts that,
unlike stocks or bonds, houses can be lived in, a fact that gives homeownership an overwhelming comparative advantage to begin with.
There is also the relative stability of home ownership. If a loss to inflation of 1.8 percentage points in.a year represents a catastrophe, as it
has been depicted, what then are we to make of an entire decade in which
blue chip stock values were seriously eroded by inflation'
But even the apparent loss of value may not be real. Housing usually is
bought with only 10 percent to 30 percent of the purchase price in cash,
but any increase in value accrues to the owner at 100 percent.
To explain: Last year, according to the National Association of
Realtors , the median sale price rose to $62,200 from $55,700 in 1979. A
large increase but, as we know, not enough to offset inflation.
However, if the owner bought the house with only $15,000 down, and
benefited from a $6,500 increase in value, his return is much greater - 43
percent greater, in fact, before deducting for financing costs.
Those finahcing costs, however, have benefits of their own in that they
are deductions from adjusted gross income on federal, state and local in·
come taxes. Uncle Sam splits financing costs with the owner.
The tax benefits don't end there. Tax credits, better than tax deduc·
lions, also can be earned. With a tax deduction, a person's gross income,
or the amount on which he is taxed, is reduced. With a tax credit, a person's liability is reduced dollar for dollar.
As with stocks and bonds, when the house is sold the appreciation is
taxed at the lower capital gains rates, and those rates may soon be
lowered even more.
In addition, homeowners over age 55 may earn a once-in-a-lifetime exclusion of up to $100,000 in gains when a prirnary residence, lived in for
three of the previous five years, is sold. It's a unique benefit.
Housing is still remains a solid investment, and perhaps the best, even
if current sales prices aren't rising as fast as the inflation rate. When you
add up all the benefits it's still a great investment.
And the only one with a fireplace.

•

WRETIA GILMORE

Today in history.

• •

,,,.
NO SAfETY NET

receive federal funds and par·
li cipate in federal programs
because they are not defined by Ohio
law as " general-purpose governments," Cochran said,
He did say there was one exceplion. fe&lt;)eral revenue sharing,
but that this is because townships
qualify for revenue sharing under
definitions in the federal law itself.
Although Cochran appeared
before the corruniltee on behalf of
three bills his association supports,
he stressed a pair under which town-

-ship trustees for the first time would
be given the authority to pass laws.
If either of those were enacted, he
said townships then would be
general-purpose goverrunents.
But the ineligibility for federal
programs was but one reason cited
by Cochran, who noted that townships, under the Constitution. must
come to the Legislature every time
they need changes in their areas of
jurisdiction.
Fur example, another pending
measure asks for authority for townships to pass along to property

owners the increased costs Of street
lighting when utilities boost rates.
Because the law is silent with
regard to increasing street light
assessments, to cover increased
rates, the townships have had to
make up the difference from their
own genei-ai.!unils. • · · · .. · ·
But Cochran said a recent finding
by the state auditor's office has had
the effect of outlawing that practice,
-- making the need for this bill even

more critical.''

President got good start with cuts

Today is Monday, March 23, lhe82nd day of 1981. There are283 days left
in the year.
Today's highlight in history :
On March 23, 1775, Patrick Henry made a plea for American freedom
when he decla~ed, "Give r~e liberty or give me death" during a speech
before the V1rg1ma Provmc1al Convention.
On this date:
In 1919, Benito Mussolini fqunded a new political movement in Italy.
In 1933, the German Reichstag gr-anted Adolf Hitler dictatorial powers
-until Apri11937.
In 11142, the United States began a program of moving JapaneseAmericans from their homes on the West Coast to inland camps. ·
And in 1945, American and British forces crossed the Rhine River in
Germany during World War !1.
·

special interests, impartial, and all
that - there is enough horse trading
and power politics in the Reagan
budget to do Washington proud.
Many opponents of Reagan· s
budget cuts have not yet begun to
fight, preferring to flex their muscle
in Congress instead of tilling with
Reagan. But some groups went
directly to the top, and some of them

WASHINGTON ( AP )
If
President Reagan needed an introduction to politics Washington
style. he got a good start while
working out his package of $48.6
billion in budget cuts.
Despite the new president's early
proclamation tl13t decisions in his
administration must be made as if
there were no next election - above

won .
The best example may be the
whopping victory of the synhetic fuel
industry, which applied all the
pressures at its conunand and won
just about a complete reversaL
Budget director David A. Stockman wanted to rescind $5.3 billion
from the Energy Department's synfuels program. But after the in-

dustry balked, Reagan decided to
cut only $300,000 and to transfer the
other $5 billion to the governmentowned Synfuels Corp., which
already has a $17 billion budget.
Another case in point is the Clinch
River Breeder Reactor projeCt,
which both Carter and Reagan wanted to kill. ·

So up front in shutting out
________________________M._ary__M_~_ro_ry_

pOOr~

WASHINGTON - What some
Democrats marvel at, as they ·
mourn, is how up front Ronald
Reagan is about it all .
He does ·not pretend to be doing
anything but what he is obviously
doing: telling the poor to pull up
their socks; telling the rich that
things will be better.
He makes no bones about his
favoritism for the oil companies, for
instance. The Law of the Sea Treaty
has been held up. Bi g Oil doesn't
care for the off·shore drilling sections, and nobody in the administration has troubled to ad·
vance a better reason for the delay .
People who oppose his budget cuts
are selfish. greedy special interests.
People who oppose the staggering
increases in the Pentagon's allowance d&lt;i not understand the Soviet
front. It's as simple as that.
Poor people who need legal ser·
vices must look to plush law firms
and the -- pro-bono publico" $500-an·
hour lawyer who may be moved to
do a spot of charity on his way to the
handball court.
Large . corporations may feel the
urge to take up the slack of the
slashed nutrition programs. They
had their chance, of course, but
never took it. Lower middle-class
parents looking to student loans to
fi}{iiiY7!/UI/fii:JI O:Ji·
711/UEOoMI&lt; Prll3iCENT PEAGAIISR£
CENT 5/Ji&amp;Yli/T 7/V[{ /II&amp; OilY/l9DI
Of Wc:TNiiM WAS T1J "NtVEI/ EMTI'!

send their children to college should institutions comes to this : The
wait patiently instead for their ships money that was vOIL&gt;d for them last
to come in when the tide rises in the August will go to the states in block
economy.
grants - with, however, no in" The right to a lawyer Is not a structions that it should be used on
basic right of citizens," OMB Direc· their behalf. The prospects are that
tor David Stockman said in an- strapped states will find some other
nouncing the $321 million cut in use for the funds .
Legal Services.
It is easier to keep children in
The wails of the poor are being · foster care, Mark Hardin of the
heard on Capitol Hill. They will not Child Advocacy and Protection
be heeded in the White House. The Agency of the American Bar
word is out : We are not our brothers' Association explained to a House
keepers.
Budget Committee Task Force.
A succession of melancholy menTo find homes for them, or to
dicants trails through the budget rehabilitate the ones they've been
conunittees - advocates of adoption removed from, takes a great dea l of
services, of black-lung recipients. work, and the .. inertia in rnany child
the voiceless, the ripped-off, the welfare agencies " condemns
unemployed. Administration defen- thousands of homeless children to
dants disrniss them as ·' professional rernain indefinitely in fa.ter homes.
lobbyists protecting their own turf."
The ABA is also in favor of Legal
It is possible that if they joined Services, but its sponsorship cannot
together, the weak could form a save the agency which Ronald
coalition strong enough to strike a Reagan has been gunning for since
little terror into the heart of Ronald he was governor of California and
Reagan. The size of a constituency is Legal Services irritated him by
the best defense . Social Security, bringing class action suits against
corporations and rich growers,
with a clientele of 25 million, Is safe.
But to the new adrninistration,
Jerome Shestack of the ABA oblegal aid is a luxury for the poor, and served that Legal Services, with its
adoption service is a frippery .
low sala ries, three percent overhead
Compassion in the case of children and local controls seemed to be just
who might bounce around foster the kind of program that a confarnilies or spend their childhoods in servative administration would cot-

ton to.
The cut in its funding, according to
reseatch done by the Council for a
l..ivable World, amounts to $12
Inillion less than the cost of one
FFG-7 Guided Missile Frigate. The
council has also figured out that AFDC cuts ($636 million) are just $12
million less than the cost of a
nuclear attack submarine.
The administration keeps telling
us that the "truly needy" will not
suffer. But nobody will tell us who
the " truly needy" are. David Stock·
rnan was once again invited to do so
by Rep. Paul Sirnon, D-!11., u yet
another budget hearing. There is no't
a generic definition, Stockman said.
They are analyzing in terms ol
programs, not people. Black-tung
benefits will be restricted to the
"truly medically disabled."
From the billions being lavished
on it, we can only conclude that the
one institution that qualifies as
·'truly needy" is the Pentagon.
Many of our people will be hungry,
cold and uneducated, but the nation
will be st,·ong.
And, as Reagan kee)lll telling
Democrats as he lashes them to
his ''economic recovery program,''
their way didn't work and the
try is crazy to give him his chance.

-(j(X)[) £VfNI!I6

INIO~

wAR Yll/W/!W/[}I}lJIJII,' "

DElLA JOHNsON

SARAH GOEBEL

LAURA EICHINGER

TAMMY SMITH

CASSIE SHEETS

8RtmlfT 70 YO//
8Y /WZ, WHEI!e
711£ if/mti/S fl&amp;NT.

DOONESBURY

NEW YORK (API
Can tournament selection corrunittee
Syracuse win away from home?
even though they won the Big East
The Orangernen, 21·11 , venture Tourney. have put that disapJrom the friendly setting of their pointment behind them.
' 26,000-seal Carrier Dome for the fir·
But can Syracuse win on the road?
st time in two weeks tonight when
· That was also pointed out by Purthey take on Purdue, 2().10, in the due Coach Gene Keady, who took
second game of the National In- over the club that made the NCAA
vitation Tournament se mifinal · Final Four a year ago after Lee
doubleheader at Madison Square Hose left to go to South Florida.
Garden. . Tulsa , 24-7, plays West
Coach Nolan Richardson, who wun
Virginia , 23-3, in the opener, with tl1e 1980 junior college crown at
tonight's winners meeting Wed· Western Texas J .C. , brought four
nesday night for the title.
stars fromthat37 -0 team with him to
"Two weeks ago we would have TulS&lt;J and produced the winningest
been happy to be in any tournament . record in the school's history . The
We were really down, " said transfers - center Greg Stewart.
" Syracuse Coach Jim Boeheim. " But guards Paul Pressey and Phil
this is a different team now . Our Spradling and f&lt;wwa rd David Brown
• team has really come together. "
- all scored in double figure s,
' The Orangemen, only 15-11 in the
The key to Tulsa's success, says
regular season, have won six tour- Richardson, came in its third ga me
nament games at the Carrier Dome of the season, against defending
in the last two weeks' - three to cap- NCAA champion Louisville.
ture the Big F.ast Conference crown,
What kind of bail does Tulsa play''
then thn&gt;e in the NIT.
Coach Gale Catlctl says this West
Syracuse is led by 7-foot senior · Virginia tt!am ha s eurne further thdn
• center Dan Schayes, a reserve his he expected.
first three varsity seasons who has
··we have a young basketball
blossomed into a 15.I scorer and 8.6 team . with nine freshmen or
rebounder . Schayes says the suphmnures." said Catl ett. "At
times we\·c l*en outstanding, at
Oran~emen , snubbed by the NCAA

· Ironton bows
· out, 72-62
ATHENS, Ohio tAPl - Doug Ray
led Tri·Valley with 20 points as the
Scotties smashed Ironton 72~2 in
Class AA boys high school basketball regional final competition
·· Saturday night.
•
Ironton dominated the first and
third quarters and Tri-vallcy the
second and most important final
quarter to earn the win. All five Tri·
Valley starters gained double
" fi~ures.
In the final period, Ironton went
cold while Tri-Valley hi til of 18 free
throws to put the game out of reach.
Tri-Valley takes a 23-2 rec-ord to
the state finals and Ironton finished
with a l:i- i I reco rd.
IRONTON l6ll - Morns 50 10,
Fields 0 o o. Fritz 2 0 4, Barnes 9 6
24; Jackson 9018 . Sleed 000,
W ilcoxon 0 -4

WQilc 0 7 7 TOTALS
.
VALLEY (721 - Willi ams&gt; I
4,

U· ll-6~ -

·TRI
f7 ; w a t SO'' 4 3 11 , Rav 8 4 20 . Bullt.! r
3 410; R,ce 6 2 14 ; Moore o 0 0,
OavisO J 0 TOTALS 26·20·72.
Score b~ quarters :
Ironton
18 16 l4 14

TrlValley

..

other limes we've been horrible.
These kids aren't the most talented,
but they don't know that. They are
Wlselfish and they believe in them·
selves. They will never give up.''
West Virginia's top scorer is 6-1
guard Greg Jones, 'who averaged
15.7 point:; per game. The Mountaineers have outre bounded their opponents in 25 of their 31 games,
helping fuel their •·unning game.
·• we try to fastbreak as much as
we can, but sometimes we have a
tendency to throw the ball up in the
stands," said Catlett. " If we play
with the same kind of consistency
we've had the last two weeks , we
could go all the way."
Pete Carlesimo, the NIT 's
executive director, noted that
tonight's crowd will set an attendance record for the tournament.
The NIT is just 150 short of last
year's record total of 29~.820. with
the semifinals and finals yet to

Ohio H.S.Iklys BaHkelball

S&amp;atl Tuumament
At Ohio State Unlven!ly
CLASS AAA
Wad:iwurth, Zl-5, v :~ . t:lcvdllnd
Adams, 24--2, Frldlly , 6 p.m.

16 19 14 23 6272

J uhn

come.

led
team across
the court
in the
ACCleague's
title and
North
Carolina wa::;
NewhisOrleans
Superdome
where
he the
playoff
champion.
and ius players gestured their
AI Wood and sam Perkins · ced a
thanks to the s upporten; in a crowd qui ck getaway to spark North
of J2. 474. some of them 19 stories Ca rolina's victory over Kansas State
above the floor .
in Salt Lake City . Wood finished with
Mack iii• said he got some pregame a learn-leading 21 pbints and Perkins
1
advice from Oa•'rcll Griffith, the had 16.
star of the Louisville Cardinals la&gt;t
The res ult provided North
year when they beat ISU in the Mid- Carolina Coach Dean Smith with a
west Regional championship game final Four berth for the sixth time in
on their way to the national cham-. 15 years. He is yet to win the national
pionship. Griffith has gone 011 to the title. however .
National Basketball Association, bill
John Ebeling led Florida
he and Mcu.: klin continue a frien- Suuthern'S victory with a 19-point
dship that be~an when they played pertormance; Derrick Rowland's 24
against cadi other in the eighth led Potsdam State and Brian
grade ill Louisville. Ky.
Kcllibrew 's 26 points paced
Landon Turner and Ray Tolbert Wt•stark .
each scored 14 points and anchored a ( :n plu rt•s 11111 rtHIIIIt'll t
fearsome frunt line and guard lsjah
Thomas provided direction as InSHIZUOKA, Japan !API - !sao
diarw ovcrwhelrncct St. Joseph's in Aoki of .Japan won the $121,000
Bloomington . Ind., and spoiled the Shizuuka Open gulf tournament,
Hawks' Cinderella season. The team beating counlrymun Akira Yabe on
frorh PhilHddphia had won three the third hole of a sudden-death
playoff games by a total of four pain- playoff.
ts bef&lt;lrc Sumlay, including a 49-48
Aoki parrcd the third extr·a hole,
upset of lop-ranked DePHul in sub- while Yabe had a bogey after the two
regional play.
llad finished the regulation 72 holes
'!'he victory put Indiana into the over the par-72 Shizuoka Country
Final Four fur the second time irosix Club's Hamaoka course with scores
.---------------of_r_li_ne:_:_
undcr-par 279.

.Voting took place last week at the
annual league meting for girls' sports.

Joining Mel Weese as a first team
selection were Southern's Della
Johnson, Eastern's Tammy Hudson
and Sarah Goebel, and Kyger
Creek's Loretti Gilmore.
Weese, a sophomore guard for the
SVAC Champion Southern Tornadoes, led the balloting cast by
each of the league coaches, who also
chose second team all league selections and honorable mention
players.
During a business session, it was
announced that the giris will have a
preview for the 1981-32 basketball
season next November at Kyger
·
Creek High School.

Yr.
10
11
12
11
11
12
12
10
12
12
11
11
12
12
9
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UaYlUII Hu\11 , 2-4- l. VS. Nl'W&lt;IrK , 2.l-3.
F n d.iy, 9:30 p.m.
C.1uunphmslup Saturday. IJ l).m.
'- CLASS AA
Dresden Tn -Valley. 2:1-2, vs. :'-lapu ieun ,
26-(), Friduy, 11 a .m.
Y u UIIJ;l ~ l l ) \\;11

.. This Final Four compares very
fa vorably with the NCAA's Final
Four," contended Carlesuno. " Any
one of them , with a basket here or
there, could have been in the
NCAA'sFinal Four."

Division Il ehampionship with a 73- yeous. Bobby Knillhl
's Hoosiers wun
I)
68 vil::tory OV\!1' Mount St. Mary's and the NCAA championship in 1976, true
Potsdam ~ N . Y . I State won the ur three in their history.
Divfsion Ill title with a 67-65 over·
Ralph Sampson led Virgini_a over
time vidory over Augu.sl.i:tna t Ill. ) · 'BYU in Allant.i!. scoring 14 uf his
Westark 1Ark . l wun the nationa I o""""'·high 22 , points after in'unior
collcuc
termissiun as the Cavaliers broke
n tournament with a 67J
50 victory over· Lincoln (Ill. )
open a close g~:unc.
Durand Macklin led the way for
The vlctory put Terry Holland's
ISU saturday, scoring 21 points antl team against North Carolina for the
collecting 10 rebounds. The Tigers third time this ::;eason. They played
were in cununand after Macklin and ea rlier during the Atlantit: Coast
G r~g Cook triugcred
a 14--0 burst Conferehce season, with the
o
ea rly in the first half. Cook fini shed Cavaliers winning both by close
with 19 points.
scores.
When the buzzer sounded. Brown
Virginia won the regular-season

sophomore Mel Weese.

Tournament pairings

results

Champl\liiShlp Saturday,

L'I.ASS AAt\

Al Keo1 Stale UlllnnH:t·
76, LurHIII Southvll~ W 6ti
At Canton Audltorlllm
Wa!.ts~~o·orth 60. C111 ntun McKmlt!y :,ti
AI Tolt!dll Cenk'llllill Hall
Nt.'wark &amp;4 , Toledo Mw. ~:ornber 74

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Napo~lcuu
43, Wllhml 4!
AI Ohio Ualvt'rslty
Dresdl!n Tn-Valley 7:!, Jruntl1n 6~
AIOaytnnArt'na
o"" 62,
CLASSA
At ~.,1 "'111 Fleldhuun
Km.srnH n H11l~er liS . Buckeye C.::ntral &amp;I

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Al~twlint:rirel'nUninrsity
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Rilyen, 22-4 , liS.

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Regi~nal

LSU ready to charge .the mountain
By Associated Press
Louisiana State Coach Dale Brown
. doesn't want his Tigers to become
fat cats just because of a regional
championship in the NCAA basket·
··ball playoffs .
"TomorrOw morning, when we
wake up, " he said after Sunday's 96s:; decision over Wichita State in the
Midwest regionals, " we 'll be ready
to charge the mountain again.·'
The •·mounlain'' he refers to. of
course, is the Final Four in
Philadelphia neKt weekend .
The Midwest champs wiil go to the
swrunit conference with the three
other regional winners - Indiana,
Virginia and Nuroh Carolina . In·
diana won the Mideast cham·
' pionship with a 78-46 decision over
St. Joseph's ( Pa. 1 in another game
played Sunday . On Saturday,
Virginia won the East with a 7HO
triwnph over Brigham · Vnung and
North Carolina won the West with an
82-08 rout of Kansas State.
ISU will play Indiana and
Virginia will meet North Carolina in
the national semifinals, and the winners will play for the NCAA Iitle
Monday night.
In other NCAA action over the
weekend, Florida Souther·n won the

ELAINE SMITH

GIRLS' 1981 SV AC DREAM TEAM
Fl,rst Team
.
Players- School
Mel Weese, Southern
Tammy Hudson, Eastern
Della Johnson, Southern
Sarah Goebel, Eastern
.
Loretta Gihnore, Kyger Creek
Second Team
Mecca Jordon, Southwestern
Laura Eichinger, Eastern
Tana George, North Gallia
Karen Stit, Hannan Trace
Tammy Smith, Southern
•
Honorable Mention
Elaine Smith, Southern
Cassie Sheets, Eastern ·
. Linda Edwards, Southwestern
Sherri Hollingshead, North Gallia
Amy Roush, Kyger Creek
Lana Nichols, Hannan Trace
SVAC Most Valuable PlayerMel Weese

Mountaineers face Tulsa
in NIT semifinals tonight
.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP l - Nearly
4 million of Ohio's approximately 11
million residents are living in areas
which do not have access to most
federal programs, the Legislature
has been told.
Michael Cochran, lobbyist for the '
Ohio Association of Township
Trustees and Clerks, gave that word
in testimony before the House Local
Government Committee where
several bills affecting Ohio's 1,320
townships are being heard.
Townships, unincorporated areas
of the B8 counties, are not eligible to

une

TAMMY HUDSON

For the first time since girls high
school basketball became a part of
the Southern Valley Athletic Conference, an SV AC dream team was
voted upon by league coaches along
with a Most Valuable Player award
which was won by Southern

~ ,

U•ti!Jt'r... unu lilh· . . ,

.

Weese chosen
league·MVP

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Qhlo
Monday, March 23, 191f

Most areas won't have access to programs

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinei-Pag-3

II

.

.-, n mu ..,

l ~".:::,-;;,"::;-1 --

I

I

II

I

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At City l.J.Jan, w~ can help you
tum that incre;~~ing value into the
money you lll&gt;ed to meet major
wants or needs. !.ike a col l~ge
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LENDER

�•
........ ...... • , •.• .II"\.

Page-_4 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

Middleport, Ohio

seas for advocacy and ministry to theme of the UMW, was noted and
officers' reports were given. The
children.
forced with prayer and a self-denial
Mrs. Eichinger, Mrs. Dorothy • meaning of the least coin was exoffering, was presented at the Downie. and Mrs. Janice McGee plained by Mrs. Ada Warner wbo
Tuesday night meeting of the United ·were readers for the program on then took the offering. Forty-two
sick and shutin calls were reported.
Methodist Women held at the children and the kingdom of God.
Pomeroy Church.
Several articles including " A Child and members discussed goals for
Mrs. Polly Eichinger, leader, is a Sense of .Wonder" by Mrs.
the year including more emphasis
prepared a worship center which in- Eichinger; "A Child is Loving" by on work with shutins. A Day Apart
. eluded pictures of the members as Mrs. Downie, and "Children Need
retreat is being planned with the
date to be announced later.
children used in an identification Love" were read.
game. Scripture was taken from
Luke 18, "suffer the little children",
With Miss Grace Campbell at the
Bible study was discussed and will
followed by an explanation of the piano, members sang, "Jesus Wants be held on the first Tuesday of each
UMW's work toward protecting the Me for a Sunbeam" and " Go Tell It month at noon. · Mrs. Thelma Dill
interests of children. ·n was noted On the Mountain" and then gave will be the leader, and ihose atthat the offering will be used half in personal childhood reflections.
tending are to take a sack lunch.
this country and the oiher half over·
" Reach Out and Win One in 1'181"
Mrs. Warner, chairman of global

By Ellen Bell
Ubrarlan
It seems that almost every day
• someone says, "You should tell
people about" and then they mention something that really isn't
" big'' enough for a whole column.
So this is a collection of things
that I should "tell people about."
Agg1e Dexon retired at the end
of February. We had a small party in her honor and the staff gave
her a gold locket with room for
pictures of grandchildren. On the
back we said, ''We miss you'' and we sure do! Aggie had 16

years of library know-how, and
that's almost irreplaceable.
When Aggie retired, the board .
decided not to hire a new person
to replace her. Instead, they increased the nwnber of hom's
Madhu Malhotra works. So we
now see Madhu two more days
each week. Madhu has worked
for the libraries for three years
and is well known .for her good
looks and sunny disposition as
well as for doing her work well .

Another staff change will be
coming up in April, unless the
federal government makes some
changes in the budget. Jenny Schmidt, who has been a CETA
worker at the libraries.s ince last
June, will be " terminated" along
with other CETA employes in
April. For several years. the
libraries have depended upon
CETA to supply them with the
one full-tlme worker at Pomeroy
other than the administrator
ilhat's me ). Since the libraries
don't have money to hire Jenny
1 or anyone else), losing Jenny
will mean everyone who works at
Pomeroy Public Library will be
doing about one and a half times
the normal amount of work in the
same amount of time. So we ask
your forgiveness if we

C~.re

not

able to give you the service you
_,;ould like - we:ll be trying hard
to serve you well, but there are
definite limits to what we can expect to accomplish in the amount
of time available to us.

TOPS studies diet and gcxxl nutrition
The role of good nutrition and

new member. Connie Black was

em~

honored as the weekly queen and
presented a dollar and ribbon as

exercise while dieting was

phasized at the recent meeting of the
TOPS OH 1466 of Rutland .
Mrs. Shorty Wright presented
material on the importance of fruit
in the diet, especially bananas which
provides needed potassium. A bonus
point system was explained with
members exercising at the next
'meeting to receive 10 extra points to
those they have accwnulated during
·
themonth.
Nellie Haggy was installed as
leader of the chapter in a candlelight
ceremony. The new offi cers will
receive club charms ~n Mrs.
Wright, retiring leaMr.· in appreciation for support cturing the
past year.
Paula Myers was welcomed as a

others sang

in

her

honor.

In~

March--a month for planting.
March as a month for planting was
d.iscussed by Miss Ruby Diehl at a
recent meeting of the Star Garden
C~b held at the home of Mrs. Wanetta Radekin.
Introduced by Mrs. Anna Ogdin.
program chairman, Miss Diehl said
March is not only a month for planning but for planting. She said that a
variety of seeds may be sowed in hot
beds and cold frames now. Mi~s
Diehl also suggested that cuttings be
taken from house plants, but not cacti , at this tune.
Mrs. Neva Nicholson's topic was
"G rowing flowers from Seed'' and
she talked about annuals and color
mixtures noting that yellows.

oranges and reds are a go&lt;Xi com-

bination ·as are pinks, blues and
whiles. In a list of fl owers slow to
germinate

were

petunias , · im-

patiens, balswn, panzies, sweet
peas. ageratwn, geraniwn and
begonias.
Mrs. Pauline Atkins spoke of ways
to use chrysanthemwns noting that
·they are attractive along walkways ,
between shrubs, in corsages, and as

houseplants.
On display at !he meeting were
forced branches brought by the
members as a follow-up to last month's meeting where tips on forcing
were given .
Mrs. Stella Atkins presided at the

Sisters celebrate birthdays

formation on the club may be utr
tained by calling 742-3062.

Social Calendar
MONDAY

HARRISONVILLE CHAPTER.
OES, past matrons, Monday, home
of Mrs. Betty Bishop. Members to
take white elephant gift.
ELI DENNISON Post 467 .
Rutlana, will hold an executive committee meeting Monday at7 p.m. All
officers are urged to attend and any
other interested member. Future activities of the post will be discussed.

Pomeroy PTA to cover
expenses for spring program
Expenses of a spring program to
be presented by the Pomeroy
Elementary School students will be
paid by the Pomeroy PTA.
Meeting Monday night, the PTA
agreed to not only pay for the expenses of the program but also to
build a suitable backdrop. There
will be a $1 admission charge for
adults. It was noted that the PTA
did not agree to handle the Christmas program expenses.
The safety patrol trip to
Washington, D. C. in May was
discussed and the unit will decide at
the April meeting the amount of
money to be contributed by the PTA
toward that trip.
It was reported that four of the
school teams are in need of new
basketball uniforms and Mr. and
Mrs. Randy Hawley were appointed
to check cost estimates. Robert

Morris, principal, suggested that
two citizen band radios would be
helpful for the kindergarten buses.
A Wall Disney movie, "Jungle
Book", will be shown by the PTA at
the schoor on March 'n with the admission to be $1.
Art work by the children in conjunction with the Right to Read was
on display at the meeting.
Speaker at the meeting was Ellen
Bell, Meigs librarian, who talked
about the opportunities of the basic
adult education program and advised · that information on the
program can be secured from the
libraries.
The third grade won the room
count. Morris had devotions to open
the meeting conducted by Joan An·
derson, vice president. Refreshments were served by the fifth
grade.

OPEN .7 DAYS
8 AM TILIO PM
CORNER OF LOCUST
~ &amp; PEARL ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

concems, spoke on the mua~
problem and the .uponliblllty rl the
church. She reported that UMOOitE
started in !940 has railed nli1lktna
for relief to refugees which hu been
distributed through Church World
Servit'e. Mrs. Warner abo talked
about pornography on lelevlalon and
urged the members to write letters
of protest to the statioll!l.

. . . ar ina\

Lenkn services were announced
by Mrs. McGee who abo noted
reading books available to the mem.
hers.
Refreshiments were served by
Mrs. Norma Parker, ·Mills Mryrtia
Parker, and Mrs. Evelyn Clark.

SUPERMARKET

Where Friendliness &amp; Savings Go Hand in Hand

•

Group II meets
The Women's Association meeting
ro be held Thursday was announced
at the Tuesday night meeting of
Group II, Middleport United
Presbyterian Church, held at the
home of Mrs. Myron Miller with
Mrs. Eddie Burkett, C{)-hostess.
Mrs. Paul Haptonstall presided at
the meeting with Mrs. Lewis Sauer
reporting on the church tablecloth
sewing project. The least coin offering was taken by Mrs. Miller who
also was devotional leader.
A religious play entitled "In As
Much" was presented with all of the
members taking part. Mrs. Harry
Moore had the closing prayer. Can·
dy was &gt;erved during the meeting
with a Saint Patrick's Day salad
being served during the concluding
social hour.

USDA CHOICE
PER LB.

CHUCK ·STEAK •••••••••••
.

USDA CHOICE

$}&amp;9
STEAK·····························

SWISS

'
Ordination for three deacons, Billy
CO'Lart, Oris Smith and Wayne
Roush, were held Sunday evening at
the Racine First Baptist Church.
The Rev. Charles Lusher
delivered the charge to the deacons
and the Rev . 'bon Walker, pastor of
the Racine church, delivered the
charge to the church. The ordination
prayer was given by the Rev. Clif.
ford Nuss. Music was by the church
choir.
,
following the ordination, a reception was held for the deacons in the
church soc1al room.

PER LB.

SPECIAL
FRA.NKIES" WIENERS .........H.qt... 89~
SUPERIOR BACON .................. ~t~~.... 99~
G6oDS
CHICKEN
1
POLISH
SAUSAGE
........................
L~~ •. 99~ ,',.,..,
LEGS
LONGHORN/
, - - -.- - - - - - D E l l SPECIALS-------, ~~: ~CH.EESE $}99
'·

Completes training
Pic. LouEIIen R. Ohlinger,
daughter of Lew Roush of Patriot .
Star Route, Gallipolis, and Velma
Roush of Lynn Drive, New Haven,
W. Va., ahs completed basic training
at Fort Dix, N. J .
During the training, students
receive instruction in drill and

HOMEMADE

~··.:"

.......

"*

$}·5

BAKED BEANS ••• !.E.R.!-!l~. 79" DUTCH LOAf ........
.
,
_
OR
PER LB.
PER LB. 79
P&amp;P LOAF..............
COLE SLAW,........•..•.•..

PER LB.

PER LB.

.

59~

LENTEN

tactics, military courtesy, 1nilitary
justice, first aid, and Anny history
and traditions.

I

Jessica Erin Sayre, daughter uf
Aaron and Shirley Sayre, Syra~use ,
recently celebrated her second bir·
thday with a party at her home .
A Snoopy cake, ice cream, punch
and coffee were served. Games were
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Congo and Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Bailey, grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Roger John·
son and Dawn, Mr. and Mrs. I.any
Sayre and Sherry, the Rev . and Mrs.
Carl Hicks . Sending gifts were Mr.
and Mrs . .James Brace. Mr. and
Mrs. Ken Jacks, and Mr. and Mrs.
Terry Con~o. La,ter. the fifth bir-

thday of Michelle Sayre also was otr
served with a party at her Syracuse
horne.
A Sesame Street theme was
ca rried uul with a Bert and Ernie
cake be111g served to Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Bailey and Mr. and Mrs.
Gene Congo, grandparents, Elaine :
and Tara Congo, and Mr. and Mrs.
Ruger Johnson and Dawn. Sending
gi ft&gt;; r.ere Mr. and Mrs. James
Brace, Mr . and Mrs. James Cottrill,
Mr. and Mrs. Ken Jacks. and Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Sayre.

FISH

THE OPENING OF

THE OFFICES OF

MACARONI
&amp;CHEESE

JOHNATHAN APPLES ••••••••••••••••••••••••
JLB. BAG
994
JUICY CALIFORNIA

NAVEL ORANGES •••••• ~~~~••• 99~

CAMPBELL'S

Steven L. Story and Karen H. Story

GENERIC

ROME BEAUTY ••••••••••••• ~ ......t.~~.~~.q. 99c

I

AnORNEYS AT LAW

LIMIT 3

CREAM OF

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

SPECIAL

MUSHROOM. lOY.CANoz.

FOLGER'S

SOUP

FLAKED
COFFEE

1

GENERIC SPECIAL

CANTAlDPES ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~. '1. 19
RED DELICIOUS APPLES

CABBAGE •••••••••••~~!!.~~•.. PER LB. 19~
CELERY, ••••••••••••••••••••••• r.e.~.s.T.':.~l&lt;•• 39~
CAULIFLOWER.•••••• :.!.~~.~M~.•• •1.39

•$}39 ' ~:.R

STORY &amp; STORY

U.S . DOMESTIC

59
RUSSETT POTATOES
••••••
LP
••
$3
.

*SEASTAR
BATIER DIPPED

ANNOUNCING
Stephanie Sc{yre

~

11

ceremonies. weapons. map reading ,

jessica Sayre

$}69 ;

PER LB.

.

GROUND CHUCK···························

CHUCK ROASTS

HAWAIIAN

$

•

MONARCH

PU CH

69

ASSORTED
VARIETIES

,,

PINK SALMON

J3 oz.
CAN•

.........

~

:.£·
I. 1
. •• \

lS!/2 OZ.
CAN

46 -oz.
Can

I

lif _::......-'

·:~·

;'

l.
•

CLIP&amp;SAVE

GOLD MEDAL

FOLGER'S

INSTANT
COFFEE

CLIP&amp;SAVE

~',\1\l(l lil .,.• J .IH lli ~j t\1 1 \Jil\]'-,!li Hf ~
~LD~EDAL

•

FLOUR .

.

ALL PURPOSE

WITH COUPON
WITHOUT
COUPON '

99'

10 OZ. JAR

Xllt·lll;t·l:l

1

: ~ tluUR

LB.

S 69(·

..

;

.

w

lb

Bn

t n11t1 " " · w•HI LU\jp\111

1
:.• ' ""' '· "" ''"'' ,.,, ltm&gt;l¥
~
•

~

a:

Q

.
l f 18 / 81
hi&gt;"U
G1.1l11t ~ ~ Co •d"'•' flovft l 81 ~• Sin&gt;~~

~
092 11700 .._.,
00 30 01 ~

,• ;~ ~ 1 \ r ,~/i!ii! jii:f•li!:•l:i L AROtNAll ~
CLIP &amp; SAVE ... CLIP &amp; SAVE

WALDORF
. , BATHROOM
TISSUE

SCOTT
The Uaily Sentinel

ELS

jUSPS lt$-MOI
.4. rn, lsi on llf Muldmedll, lit.

/

Published every afternoon e1cept Sunday,

Monday thruugh Friday, 111 Court Street. by
Lhe Ohio Valley Publishing Compt~ny Multimedl~i,

Inc. Pomeroy, Ohio ~769 ,
992·2156. Second l'lass postage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio.

I

.

SUPERIORS
SPECIALS
•

Cundiff, Nancy Ackerman, Sarah
Drummond, Angela Frsher, Merri
Ault, Jennifer-Couch, David Fetty,
and Mary Ann Myers . Others purchasing gifts for the bride-elect were
Cathy Jones, Melody Hoschar, and
Jan Judge .

Member : Tht- ~Ol' l11 lal Pres.!!, Inland Dai·
ly PreS! ASSOC'iation, ;md lhe American
Nt!wspa~r Publu;her~ Association, National
Adv crtlsi n,l{ Rep re~en tatl ve, Lc!nding
A!i.soc•ate:s. 3101 Eudld AYe., Cleveland.

BEEF

LEAN·N·TENDER

EXTRA LEAN.

USDA CHOICE
•
BONELESS

Lesa Fetty honoree of shower
A surprise bridal shower was held
recently honoring Miss Lesa Fetty
bride-elect of James Sirruns, at the
home of Mrs. Janice Fetty.
Mrs. Ellen Thoma, a products
representative, conducted the party
in the usual way and then announced
that everything purchased by those
attending were gifts for her.
Games were played with prizes
being awarded and refreshments of
cake, three heart-shaped ones inscribed "Best Wishes, Lesa and
Jim" baked by Mrs. Fetty, punch,
nuts and mints were served.
Attending were the bride-elect's
mother, Mrs. Phyllis Fetty, Mrs.
Isabelle Couch, Debbie Doerfer,
June Ann Wamsley, Mrs. Ellen
Couch, Sheila Ringhiser, Debbie

SALE DATES

USDA CHOICE

Ordinations reported

meeting which opened with a
meditation entitled " Cure for
Frustrations" and prayer. For roll
call members named their favorite
houseplant. Guests introduced were
Mrs. Beulah Lowther Udvardy, Mrs.
Binda Diehl, Mrs. Tina Burns, Mrs.
Hazel Frances, Miss Octa Gilogly,
and Mrs . Judy Allen Brooks.
Mrs. Ogdin won the hostess prize .
Refreshiments were served by the
hostess and her daughter, Mrs. Burns. Mrs. Allegra Will will host ttie
April 1neetmg. Others attending
were Mrs. Martha Chapman, Mrs.
Lula Levis, Mrs. Bessie Stout, and
Mrs . Pearl Welsh.

............. , .-c ...... ei-Page--5

tVIIUUU:fo'""' · • - ••· ~

Vaughan's

'Of Such is the Kingdom ' meeting theme
" Of Such is the Kingdom", a
program of concern for children en·

0 """"'""' .,. ' -

Plus Tax
Jumbo
Roll

8/16 OZ. RET.

I

89~

4 ROLL PAK

DOMINO
OR POWDERED

l-Ib. Box
SUGAR ••••••••••••••
3-DIAMOND
CHUNK LIGHT

TUNA ...........~~~-~~.

Ohm.~:'lll5 .

POSTMASTER : Send address to The DBily
Sentmel, Ill Court St. , Pomeroy, Ollio f6769.

FROZEN FOODS

SUBSCRIPTION RAT&amp;5
By Ca rrier ur MOlor Rtulf

One week
One Month

..... , ....
.. 1 .

Ont" Yettr .

Almost all the electricity made:
by Ohio Power is generated with
steam produced by burning coal.
In this sense, electricity Is coal coal By WI rei
And. it takes a lot of coal to
make the electricity our customers use. In fact, the American
Electric Power System which

' 11 .00

. . 1&lt; .10
. ..

. . . $52.110

SI"'!GLECOPY
PRICES

Daily ......

IS CenLs

Sullscriberll nut des•ring to JlliY t~ c~:trner
may remil m ad\lcmce direct to The D11ily
Sentinel 011 ll 3, 6 ur 12 mooth OOsis. Credit
will be g1ven curner e11ch month.
No subscnption.s by lllilll pennilted in townll
where home carrier service is available .
MAIL SUBSCRlPTIONS
Ohio a ad Wrst VlrJtaia
J Month .... . ... . .... . , .. . , ...... Sl0.50

Silt month
I Year .

.... , ........... fl7 ,6(1
. ..... , . , ...... , .... 133.00
Rlltr•Ou.tlklr Ohio
•ad Wnt VlrciDJII

3 Mooth ..
SMooth
I Year

UI .OO

" 120.00
138.00

'

I

we 're part of uses more coal than
any other electric utility in the
nation.
Also, since coal is more economIcal to use than other fuel, and
fuel is the major factor In the cost
of making electricity, our use of
it helps keep your electric rates
below the national average.*

CARDINAL

REGULAR OR CRINKLE CUT

FRIES ........................ ~ •••.. 89~,
-

2-LB BAG

·source. E.E 1 StatiStiCal YearbooK No. 47
November. 1980

J •

.----------------~
BAKERY BU~.
CARDINAL

/

BREAD ~~~~r r;. :~ ~

3

-160Z .

'

2LB . BOX

FRIED CHICK EN-·· •• •• ••• •• .....•••.•••••••
·TONY'S CHOICE SAUSAGE PillA
..

&gt;
&lt;
&gt;
~~/ ~~·

CARDINAL
HOMOGENIZED

1' \'

M..•••••.......•••.•.... ~.~~~:~~-~239

vve give It our best.
OHIO POWER COMPANY

DAIRY VALUES

LOAVE~

99~

_~

KRAn
AMERICAN PIMENTO

VALLEY FARMS GRADE A

PLASTIC

1~~~·

$ 49

SWISS
·

LA'RGE EGGS . . . . ~..........~PAl; •••

69t

�Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Paa&amp;-6:-The Daily sentinel

Television
•
•
VIewmg

'

lffiP-ortant news for ultra low tar smokers.

.,._ ,

''
f

..... •.,'

-·...
-·
--....
' t:

NEWS
RAINSOW FACTORY
CAJIOI. SURN!TT AND
FJIIENDI
AIICN!WS
3-2·1 CONTACT
OVER !AIY Guoat: Stanlay
Kramer, producer of auch film clu·

YEMSS

I KJ

I

...'

TEANIN

alca •• 'High Noon' and 'The Caine
Mutiny' . Hoa1 : Hugh Oowna.

•

I KJ

'll.edoCI!&gt;tloned; U.S.A.)
.(IJ NIICNEWS
THE DOOR
MOVIE ·(ADVENTURE) 'I&gt;

41:30
;
11

Emll

DEFILD

And The DetecUv11"

A~

THE IIUSIC
(I) (!g) CIS NEWS
WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
IJLIAI, YOGA \NO YOU
• AIICN!WS
8:1511
CIIIUPDATENEWS
7:00
• PIIIIIAOAZINE
NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
A_LI,lll THE FAMILY
ill). FA. .LY FEUD
NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD
(I) TICTACDOUGH
()])
IIACNEIL·LEHRER

LISl"elJ,~, I

REP~!~S

..r::}

7:30

OF~ fOTHOLe
~1\II~IMIOI.E:~!

.,

m

'

..
l

BOY'SIIf'S EVEH MAMAQED
STE~

TO BUFFALO ASHARP
KID LIKE YOU, EH?

LIS TEN~

I~PI.Y

FACTS! HEKE'G AYOUN6
M.D., CHAAoEG MroEST FEEG,

SHE TOOK
ME UNDER
HER I'IINo,

60E5 OUTA HER ~AY F()l{ Dlll

AH' ··

M'CLEI'I JUST 6ATHERS

PEOPLE ...

I

Jumble Book No. 15; containing 110 puzztn, Is avalla!H tor $1.75 postpllkl
from Ju,.,.,.., elo thlt newspaptl, Box ~. Norwood, N.J . 0784S. Induct. your
nama, addrn1, zip .;ode and make checks payable to Newsptptlbooka.

.

BRIDGE
Bad guess sinks contract
. By Oswald Jaeoby
and Alan Sonia~
Alan: "The truism that aces

•

in today's hand."

·Oswald: " It doesn't always
apply. but it sures does today .
West opened a trump and
while South was studying the
dummy, East did the same.
Then the ten was played from
dummy to hold the trick a nd
the seven of spades .led. East
ducked casually (he had been
given time to think) and South
played his jack,..
Alan: "West won with the
queen and got to lead a second
trump. South won in dummy
and struggled manfully, but
with no success at all. As a
matter of fact, he went down
two tricks because West got in
with his ace of diamonds in
time to lead a third trump."
Oswald: "We can't blame
South lor misguessing the
spade. We can see that if he
had gone up with his king he
would have made his contract
easily, but even the best
bridge player.; can't guess
righ! all the lime. What we do
know is that II East had
played his ace of spades,
Souih would have had no prob·
!em makinR !'en tricks."

~mine . )

(l)(j]) GREATPERFOIIIIANCES:
LIVE FROII LINCOLN CENTER
'Sutherland, Horne, Pavarottl With
the New York City Opera Orchat·
tra' Thit ga la hlatoric co ncert
marka thellrat time thla legendary
trio have ever performed together
on the atme at age. Dame Joan
Sutherland , Maril yn Horne and
tenor Luciano P•varottl pertorm
aelect iont from varlout aourctl
under the direct ion of Rlc.herd
Bonygne conducti ng the New York
Clpe&lt;a Orchoitra .
8:30
NEW I IILE IAFFLE SHOW
8 :58
.l;INUPDATEN!WS
t :OO
•CIJIIONDAYNIGHTATTHE
IIOYIEB 'Tho Monkey Mioolon '
Start : Robart Blake, Keenan Wyn n.

•..

ALLEYOOP
ALL RIGHT, O&lt;AYLA! FIND OUT FROM
THE QI..D ONE WHERE HIS METAL

VAUL'T 15!

•

~

he

Now the MERIT idea has been·introduced at only 4 mg tar.New MERIT.Ultra Lights. A milder MERITfor those who prefer
an ultra low tar cigarette.
·
~·
New MERJT {/ltra Lights. It's going to set a whole new taste
:standardfor ultra low tar smoking
·

doinq

with

her

talk-

inq?

WINNIE
1&lt;' TH.&gt;.T 17AR K· HAIRE D
LI TTLE BE,&gt;.u Tv WANTS
TO RE61STER WITH ~y

,l

A GENCY TELL HER TC IM&lt;U?"Ii&lt;A' i'
GIVE \\E A RING EH'?/'-,
';j

H

' l'

.
10: 15
10:28
10:30

,-.

..

10:58
1 1:00

Only
4 mgtar

·

BARNEY

..

'

Regular&amp; '
Menthol

YOU SHOULD BE
SO WARM

IT'S COLD AS A FROG
TONIGHT, MAW -- 15
TATER COVERED UP ·
REAL GOOD?

1 1: 15
1 1:28
1 1:30
'

" "Ho
Know1 You're Alone" 1880
G(I)®LOUQRANTLouhaotogo
on the defanaive when the Tribuna
l a acc uaed of belngant i-b ualnaae in
lte coverage of a factory fire while
ignoring labor problema of ita own.
~0 mine .)
(J.2) tl SOAP Burt and Saunders
Ia ad a commando raid on the kungfu
fortreu in an attempt to reacue
Jodie ; the Consummation of Jea·
sica end El's longstanding
romance p roves extremely unaet·
!ling to the macho revolutionary ;
and Cheater' a a nnoun cement that
l'le and Annie are now marrie d
provokea a confrontation with Jea·
sica and her new lover. (60 mint.)
~ TIS !V!NING NEWS
CBN UPDATE NEWS
RJSI! AND BE HEALED
PROGRAM UNANNOUNCED
C!IN_l.IPjtATE N!W.I
;
• (I) (lJ • (I) (!g) illl Gl
NEWS
FESTIVAL OF PRAISE
MOR!CAIII! AND WISE
OUTER LIMITS
NIGHT GALLERY
BH UPDATE NEWS
(lJ THE TONIGHT SHOW
' Best of Carson· Gueata : Jotn
Rivers. Bobby Kelton , Mar]oe
Gartner Oar Robin ton . (Repeat:

HEV, CHUCK, HOW WOULD
'(QU LIKE TO HELP OUT
MV TEAM THIS '(EAR ~

..4 mg "rae 0.4 my n1co!lne av. pe1 CIQale!le by FTCMe1hod
L

Warning : The Surgeon General Ha s Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
@ l' bii q•

M ,&gt; ut ~ In~

I 'I ~ I

Ultra Lights
•
.,

ME TO PITCH ?!

NO. WE'RE TRI(ING TO
RAISE A LITTLE MONEY'
AND WENEED SOMEONE
TO SELL POPCORN.. .

Tl-lAT WAS WEIRD, Bib
BROTHEIU COlJLDI-lEAR
'(OUR FALE FALL CLEAR
OUT IN THE OTHER ROOM 1

I
i

• K QJ 8
t KQ2
+6 2

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
West

Pass
Pass
Pass

Norlh

••
z•
4.

I.

Eau

Soutb

Pass
Pass
Pass

3NT

Pass

Alan: "South might ha ve
come to nine tricks after his

jack· of spades lost to West's
queen. That is unimportant.
The important point is that he
was doomed once he made

that play ."

DOWN

Inlet~

39 Genre
10 Hackman

eo

DAILY CltYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to .work it:
AXYDLBAAXR

Ia LONGFELLOW

ness•• an automobile accident
that klllt a young woman . but when
ht exemintl the body, he 1e11
hemorrhaging that the accident
ahould not ha"e cauaed. (Repeat)
'HAARV O:PattlmpeHect ' A young
Woman ia ttveatened by a ruthltH
man from he) paat , but whtn Harry
agreeatohelpher. he findahlaown
llloln ltopordy. (Rapoat)
(I) AIIC CAPTION!D NEWS
rJalMOVIE-(DAAMA)"" "Siendor
Thread'' 1He

One letter olmply •lands for another. In this sample A Is
111ed tor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slnale letters ,
opootrophea, the leneth and formation of the words ore oil
hints. Each day the codelelters are dolferent.

CRYPTOQUOTES

(II).

QNFQ ,
.

mal life ; and the fantaay oltwoman
who with to lead thelnfamout Holt
In Tht Wall Gang are Mr. Roarke'• ,
next challenges (Repeat; 70
mine.)
12:30 CIJ •
CD
TOIIORAOW
COAST· TO·COAST

QONQ

I BQ

S L

LSPUIFU

11:45 (J)MOVI!-(COM!DYI""I'&gt; "llr.
Dte..d_a.G_oea To Town', 1138
12:00 (I)
FANTASY ISLAND The
deaira of 1 famoua comadianntto
t~captthetpottightandlaadanor ·

SOUTH

+ K J91

(.sl.)

min a,)
CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
(J) IIOVIE ~ORAliA)' "lhloor"
1878
(j) illl ID
ABC NEWS
Nl(ijo!TLINE
CBS LATE IIOYIE 'QUINCY .
M.E.: Last Six Houra' Quincy wit ·

'f'OU MEAN YOU i.VANT

• 10 53

+ Q10 9 5

3S Famous
:r. Moreno
37 Minstrel
troupe
member
38Sea of (Black Sea

em

'

+
+ 8 71

'fJ,. ,(

ACROSS

W IIOVIE ·(THRILLER)

I

.7

+At0863

I Sourpuss
1 Briel fad
5 Sununer
zFrench
fun setting
, compater
9 Sprint
: 3 Media event
10 Love affair.; ,,· of March 30
13 Grand·
·4 Barbara
parental
- Geddes
14 Young hen
. 5 "In Cold
Yesterday's Ans~r
15 21 Across,
' Blood"
in England
author
IZ Music
Zl Kernel
18 Belligerent
I Divert
lover's buy !5 Brown kiwi
11 Ennoble
7 Shed
16 Cottontail
Z7 Dogmatist
19 Old French
8 Journalist's 18 Coq au Z9 Sub device
shooting match award
ZZ Famous
30 Industrialist,
20 Bog down
II Had
N.Y.C.
Cyrus 21 Follower
faith ln, .
theater
31 Baml par;t
of wye
with
23 King Arthur's33 Reminder!
22 Actor ,
"on"
abode
36 Tease
Jolm 24 Set of beUefs
20Gardner
27 Inferior
20 Statute
Z9 Senora's
shawls
32 Menu tenn
34 Sneaky one

·!!!Iff .
10:00

EAST

WEST
• Q5 2
.96 42
..i J 8

by THOMAS JOSEPH

CIJ 700CLUB
(I) N.J.T.COLLEGE BSKETBALL
Cl'IAMPIONSHIPS
,
.(l)ila) II.A.8. H. F orHoll i pe ,il 'e
the first time she h11 aeen her dad
since l'le w11 d i vorced from her
mother. Meanwhile . Hawkeye
scoff a at the promlae or a ateak din ·
~f rom a grateful patient .
1!2ltl DYNASTY Kryotle mokee a
dre11ic decision after a bitter con·
frontation with Blake over the lake
emerald neck lace, and Claudia ia
ahattered by the re-emergence of
!!d into Steven 's Ute, (80 mins .)
8 :30 U(l)ila)HOUSECALLSWhlntne
beat appllca nltofllllhevacanc:v'
a au rgeon at Kensington turn aOut to
be a beautiful woman it createa variouareactionslrom membera of the

Hi, DaddLJ' Did 40u worl4 at the
qaraqe? What did 4ou brinq me?
Yol-l qot cold hands r Wh4 do ·
4ou smel ll1i&lt;oe a· oil can?

How's Gretchen?
How's

t.i£tcMA

3·23-81

• A 10 53
• 9 7 61
+A KJ 3

cards , not small cards, applies

• (I) ila) THE WHIT! SHADOW
Having a tough time keeping up hi a
lntareat (and hla gradea)'ln echool,
Warre n Coolidge tella Coach
Fleeveahewanta to quit achooland
tryouttortl\eHarlemGiobetrottera .

'•

NORTH

+7

-were made to 'take honor

!l!!.ntJ

•

I I l I J

(

Salurday·s i Jumbles: BELIE HAZEL CHARGE BOTILE
Answer: When It comes to sport s, this cou ld be " the
tale " - " ATH LETE "

~

ANNIE

gested by the above cartoon.

(Answers tomorrow)

I

'

form the surprise answer, as sug-

Prlntans~erhere:

• BULLSEYE
WORDS OF HOPE
DYNASTY: UCLA BASKET·
BALL ThiaHBO excluaive feat urea
memorable rilm clipa and recent .
Interview• with some of the orea- '
teet atara ot the UCLA baaketball
t am .
NFORD 1\ND BON
(I) JOKER'S WILD
HOLLYWOOD SQUARES ·
DICK CAVETT SHOW
FACE THE IIUSIC
7:5,
i:I!N UPDATE NEWS
. 8:00
.(IJ LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
AIRIE
.
AMERICAN CATHOLIC
IIOYIE ~CRIME)" "lolagnum
!:J!rce" 1873
ll! IIOVIE ·(DRAMA) "'I&gt;
"DIJ!!Oll!!d Hoed" 1M3
(I) 1!2l. THAT'S INCREDIBLE A
courageou1 patent owner rlaks
electrocution to damonatrate 1
revolutionary llfeaavino device. a
man who 11 a llergic to a lm ott
everyth ino In the modern world, and
the Harrier jet, an aircraft that can
fly backward and aldewav• and
land on a dime are faa 1Ured. (eo

~~L.OCA'lnl

Now arrange the cirCled letters fo

I

I KJ

08 NEWHART SHOW

•

I

DUTIA

••
•

•

N I A

Q

S L

T B P AU

S L

LSPUIFU . -

s

NPXNZL

L NWMUP

Ynterday'a Cryptltquote:

Q N F Q.
I B Q
GM ,QPUi

I
I CARE NOT WHAT SUBJEcr' 1:&gt;

TAUGHI'IFONLYITBETAUGIITWELL.- T.H.HUXLEY

�Page:-&amp;-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, March 2f, If! I

01110

Babies arrive

12

Real Estete

Situations Wanted

REPAIR

or

' 1'
I

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'
MORE THAN $600 - These Middleport Church of
Christ young people raised over $600 for a church
remodeling project with a 24-hour rockathon. Darin
Roach won the contest for having the most sponsors, a
lolal of 32, each donati~ a minimum of Z5 cents an
hour for the 24 hours he rocked. The young people
rocked a total of 270 hours. Entertainment was
provided by Keviu and Becki Loviug, Denver R1ce, the

,.
'

"

'•

ADD BABIES
MARTIN
Mr and Mrs. Richard F. Martin,
Shade, are announcing the b1rth of a
son, Patnck Eugene, bom on Feb. 9
at the Holzer Medical Center. He
weighed eight pounds, seven ounces
and was 2lmches long. Mr. and Mrs.
Martm, the former Gwen G1bbs,

Senior Citizens Choir, Nancy Freeman, and Don and
Cathy Erwin. Ta~ part in the rockathon were, left to
right, front, Max Blake, Carol Bailey, Joe Loving, Amy
Erwin, and Eric Johnson, and back row, Joey Pullins,
Shannon McCarty, Danny Thomas, Steve Crow, ADen
Terry, Rick Wise, Scott Gheen, and Scott McKinley.
Participating but not pictured were Cathy DeLong,
Darin Roach, Trey Cassell, and Shaun Baker.

p~~nellng, ceiling or floor
llleSidlno. 992-2759.

OFFICE 742· 2003
George 5. Hobstetter Jr .

Insurance

canyour

operator's license? Phone

Public Nattee- -

NOTICE TO
AGGREGATE
VENDORS:
sealed

btds

w tll

be

recetved by the Boa rd of

Met!iJ S

County
Com
mtsstoners at the Cou nt y

"

Commtsstoners Offtce ,
located 1n the Court House,
1n the Vtllage of Pom eroy,
Oh10 unt11 tl n oon on the
3ls1 day of March. 1981.
and the btds will be opened
at 2 15 P M on the 31st day
of Marcn, 1981, for the f ur
n1St11ng of all k1nds an d
stzes of aggregate that may
be required by the Metgs
Count y Htghwa y DeparT
ment
Estimated quantlttes of
all aggregate requtred, ap
proximately 40,000 tons
SPECIFICATIONS FOR
THE BIDS AS FOLLOWS :
1 - B td pnce per ton
f o b loaded at the ven
dar's plant tor the vanous
ktnds
and
s t zes
of
aggregates that may be
requtred, whtch wil l con
form to the perttnent Stat e
ot Ohto Department of
Htghways Constructton
and
Matertals
Spectf tc attons, e)(cepttng
pea or shot graveL whtch tS
an ungraded mater•al
2 - Wtth respect to the
aforesatd, estimated quan
tttles, the vendors shall un
derstand that no guarantee
1S p tven to the actua l quan
titu:!s of aggregates to be
furniShed, but each vendor
shall be requ1r ed to turntsh
any part of th e actual
requtrements, as ordered
dunng the btd year
3 - Pn ces on th ts b1d
shall be f•rm and tn ettect
from Aprtll , 1981 toAprt\ 1,
1982
4 - A ll btdders must
agree to furn •s h ariy
aggregate matenals as
requested tn Item 1, at the
same prt ce to alltownsh•ps
of MeigS County during the
btd year
5 - On t he envelope con

I
I

~

I
1
1

I
', 1

'
;:

I

Mary H obstetter
Clerk
Mergs County

Board of
Commtsstoners

13) 16,23, 21C
PubliC N0t1ce

NOTICE FOR
APPLICATION
UNDER THE
UNIFORM
DEPOSITORY
ACT OFFICE
OF THE COUNTY
TREASURER
MEIGS COUNTY
POMEROY, OHIO

45769
App1tcat1ons wtll be
recetved by
the
un
dcrs tgned at the off1ce of
th e Board of Me•gs County
CommiSSt oners, Pomeroy,
Oh to, unttl 12 noon on th e
24th day of March, 1991,
and opened and read aloud
at 2 30 PM on March 24.
1981 tram any f1nanc tal tn
stttutton legally elt g1ble
wh1ch may destre to submtt
a wr ttt en appltca t ton to be
publtc deposttorv of th e Ac
tlve and Inter i m deposttsof
Public Moneys ot sa•d
Board as provtded by tne
Uniform Deposttory Act ,
Section 135 01 et seq of the
Revtsed Code of Ohto
Sa•d app ttcatton shall be
made tn conformtfY w1th
the lollowtng resolu t ton
piiSSt ng Februar y 24, 1981

($3,500.000 001

and

the

probabl e
max1mum
amount
of
I NTERIM
depOSITS IS TWO mt l ltOn,
F 1ve Hundred Thousand,

($2.500,000 001
BE
IT
FU)UHE
RESOLVED, that bidS be

rec etved until 12 noon on

the 24th day of Marc h. 1981.

and that nottce to all Banks
1n satd County and such
other Banks as may be
necessary
be
Qtven
publtcatton as prov1ded by
law S1'11d Board of County
CommiSS IOners reserves
me n~ht to re1ect any or an
btds '
Awards of the ACTIVE
depos1ts of Publt c Moneys
sub1ect to the control at
satd Board wtll be made on
March 24, 1981 for a penod
of TWO YEARS, com·
menctng on fhe ftrst day ot
Aprtl, 1981 Awards of IN
TERIM deposits of Publt c
Money w1ll be made March
24, 1981. for a penod at t1me
pro vtded by the County
Tr easurer commenctng on
the f trst day of Apn l, 198 1
Appl1cattons should be
seafed and endorsed " Ap
plt catto n
under
the
Untform Depos1f0ry Act '

MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS
MARY HOBSTETTER .
CLERK

(31 1, 9, 16, 23 , Ate

S858.
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Edward R.
Martin, Pomeroy. The baby was
bOm on the birlbdsy of his grandmother, Mrs. Martin.

have another son, Steven, seven.
Maternal grandparents are Helen
Gibbs, Pomeroy, and Harold E . Gibbs, Hartford, W.Va. Patemal grand-

Will babysit in my home

Monday through Friday
Very- cheap, lnlerested In
doing somethtng more

AIRMAN Jeffrey S. Ury 1 son of

Air Force basic trammg.
The ainnan will now receive
specialized instruction m the communications-electromcs systems
fields.

William T. Ury of 1105 Meadowbrook
Drive, and Mary L. Keeler of 206 N.
Park Drive, Pomt Pleasant, W. Va .,
has been assigned to Keesler Air
Force Base, Miss., after completing

-

31

so

prova tandsetlement
CASE No 23238 F•nal Ac
count of Darts Thomas,
Executnx of the Estate of
Ethel M Nelson , Dece ased

Daily

or Wrete

ranch bnck home tn Baum
Addition, Pomeroy , Ohio
Gas heat, central atr CaO

)
)
)
)

Wanted
For Sale
An nounc ement
For Rent

•

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2
3 _ _ _ _ __
4 _ _ _ _ _ __

5 _ _ _ _ __

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,•i

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

B _ _ _ _ __

of
Aprtl,
1981 , atwilt
wh1ch
me
sa1d
accounts
be t1consrdered and conttnued from
day to day untt l ftnally
dtsposed of
Any person Interes ted
may ftle wntten eKcepttons
to said accounts or to mat
ters pertamtng to the
executton of the trust, not
tess than f •ve days prtor to
the date set for neanng .
Robert E Buc k

wrap around decking,
over double garage and
large workshop Asking

10 rnch plow with J point
hitch . Phone 949-2681

$.46,500 00. Or buy both
homes and 10 acres tor
$87,500 00
NEW HOME
3

1972 Cub .tractor with ap·
proxmately 1.50 hours use .
Culllvators, fertilize a1·
1achment, plows, diSc,
sickle bar, wheel welyhfs.

guarantee os given 10 lhe

1 - lnMtmonlm

41- Moarte

Homu

..·- - - - - - 11 _ _ _ __ __

11 _ _ _ _ _ __
13

tor R tn t

Announct&gt;mt&gt;nU
Go\'Uw&lt;*w
H•ppy Ads
losttnd Found

3-

·~~e;
~~· materrals,
~~~~~~~ ma~s;as
bofumrnous

~- M I!C

n-

8U!rneu

Trucuror

Site

51! f~1Ul

• ,r ....._.autos tor Stlt
1J- VIn\ I 4 W 0

5tlel

14- MO!tf('/'Ciifl

l1 - Mobdl! Home1

,A..,to Part1

a -

lor S. le

I Acceno"u

ll - F•rml lor Stte

17- AIJIORIIPir r

li - Bulr"''' lurldrngi

JS- Loh I ,l,cruge
U - Retl Eitlle
lt - ReiiiOrl

•SERVICES

Wint Ad Adverhsmg
De•dlmes
1 lGP M

D1rt r

tar Mondl'l'

31 --------------32
_ _ _ _ _ __
33. _ _ _ _ _ _ __
34 . _ _ _ _ _ _ __

potntment,
Decedent s
Name and Address and
Case Number are listed
Vtctor Brown, 42960 51
Rt 124, Minersville, Ohto
45763, EKecutor, Feb 27,
1981 , Agnes Coleman,
Brown 's Tratler Ct., Miner·

11 - t'lomelmprovemtnu
U - PIIJmDrng &amp; EHIYifrng

ll- E

"""'''"f

14 - lllfclr rCII
I fhtrrgerl! ro n
U - Gtnertl Hlvtrnt
h - M H Rtp1rr
17- Upllollltrr

sv•lle, Oh•o 4576J , 23352

Paul J Gerig, P. 0 Box
268, 3 W Stimson Ave ,

Alhens, Ohro

35--------

45701 , Ad·
mtn1strator, March .t, 1981 ,

Rates and Other Information

Cell 1 Longstreth aka Cella

IJWordtor Und• r

I
Lon3s1reth , 32HS
Woolyar
Rd . Albany ,
Ohio 45710, 23348

Cufr
1

dly
l d.lyl

1.0(1

JO

Cfrlrt•
IU
I tO

) dl•t

l DO
JOO

1
Jll

• dl'/'1

t

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E1ct'l word o~•r the rnrnrrniJrn 15 wordt rt 4 clr'lll orr III'Orll Dl'f di Y

Adl runn rnt Olhtr """ contltlllllfl de11 wrllbt cftergta ,,,.,, 1 dey
rile

Mail This Coupon With Remittance
The Daily Sentmel
Box 729
Pomeroy , Ohro 45769

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

In memory' Ctrd of ,,.,., 1nd ODrtue,
mr111mum Cull rn 111 .. •11ce

t c111n ••r wetrCI

n 00

Mobrlt Home 1e111 '"" Y "a setn trt o~cuoi•CI
, , writ'! Ulll with
orC11r H ce111 chert• 101 1111 urrwrnt l o • ,.. 11..,0• ,., C•r• of The

Sen h"ll

Gene Yost, R D. Rae me,
Ohto 45771, Admtn1straror
With Wtll AnneKed, March
10, 1981 , Hatt1e H Pavnter ,
Portland, Ohto, 23351
Downre Nelson, 4931 Nor

th St, St R1 60 NW, Me

Connelsvllle, Ohio 43756,
Executor, March 1, 1981.
Ora Nelson .Prottttt aka
Ora P Nelson and Ora
Nel!on, Route 3, County

every

Frtday

nigh17 p m Harlford Com
munity Center

Hartford,

Skyline ,
carpel

Announcements

co tns, rings, 1ewe1ry, etc
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Mtddleport.

RACINE

GUN

Ractne Gun Club, every
Frtday night starting at
7 JO p m Factory cnoke
guns only

YOUR

PIANO

Too

valuable to neolect. expert
tuning &amp; and repa1r . Lane
Oantels, 742·2951 or 992

2082
Ractne Volunteer F1re
Department spopsors a

22 rifle
MEIGS MUSEUM open by
appotntment January· Mar

c h 992-2264, 992·2802, 992
2360 or 992 2639 . Histor1es
for
sale
Pomeroy
Mtddleport Librartes .

Rd l , Albany , Ohio, 23356

Il l 23, 30, 141 6, Jtc

Question answered free

$185 00 to $500 weekly doing
mailing worl&lt;
No eM perience requtred
AP·

2571

PLY : Crrcle Sales, PO .
Box 224 0, Richmond Hill,

SEVERAL chotce building
lots, Eastern Distnct, Tup
pers Platns·Chester water
Owner wtll help ftnance

NYlWB
Toy

Part1es now 1n our 26th
year , •s expanding and has
openings tor managers &amp;
dealers Party Plan ex·
perience helpful Guaran
teed toys and gifts . No cash
Investment, no collecting,
deltvertng . Car &amp; phone
Call collect,
necessary

Real Esta1e

Wonted to Bu

WANTED
TO
BUY
GOLD,
SILVER,
PLATINUM, STERLING
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR
Y, MISC . ITEMS AB·
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT ,
OH I0 992 3476

CHIP WOOD. Poles max
diameter 14" on largesl
end $12 ..50 per ton. Bundled
slab
110.SO per Jon
Delivered 1o Ohio Palle1
Co, Rock Springs Rd,
Pomeroy 992 26419.

NEW Ll STING -

Just

what you're look1ng for
- nice 2 or 3 bedroom,
l'h bath, home on a good
street 1n Middleport
Large •level lot , base
ment , w b t p, carpet
1ng, many new features

JUST' $24,900
NEW LISTING

'·

'·'

..'

musicians to form a rock
band · Lead guitar, second
guitar , organ or plano
player, drummer, trumpet
player, tenor sa)( , Must be
able to play rock and soUl
music . Interested people
must have their own equip·
ment . Serious parties call

--

1977

mall self addressed stam·

ped envelope to : 819 W
Summit, Durand, Ml48429 .
Babysitter needed In the

No pels

John Sheets, 3 and one half
miles south ot Mtddleport

on Rt 7.
MOBILE HOME for ren1
Completely
furntshed .
Adults preferred . Depostt

992 2749
......

44

_ --

Aparlment
tor Rent

Includes wood burner
Insulated. carpetd, also
storaoe
building

RIVERSIDE APTS 1 &amp;. 2

free patterns mstde $1 00

bedroom

$29,900

All CRAfT 100115 $1.75 uch

avajlable

apartments

EQual

op

LOCAL
financial
In
stllutlon needs Individual

992-6191
ASSOCIATES

q_ Fui-n;Siied ~R!5Jin$ ­

Dottle &amp; Roger Turner

Sleep tng rooms, by the
week
Kitchen ,
and
television lounge Carrvout
store and restaurant w1thin

992 5692
Jean Truuoll949· 2660
OFFICE 992· 2259

with bank experience to
work Friday evenings,
Saturdays, and vacation

REALTOR

lime . Send resume 10 Box
729-G, c·o The Dally Sen·
tine I. Pomeroy, Oh. 45769.

Henry E. Clllilnd, Jr

992-6191
ASSOCIIII'I'ES
Dottie &amp; Roger Turner
992-5692

Situations Wanted

---

Jean Trussell t..e9·2660

WELDING doni", 10 years
exper&gt;cnce, equipped to do

OFFICE 992· 2259

atHis, casting, aluminum,

"'

tB

llZ.Quilt Ori&amp;~llls
lll·,dd I lllod Quilts
I 30-Sotaltf f ISIIIOIIS·Sins ll-56
I zt.QuKk 'n' (ISJ I tanslln
121-(n"""" PatchOTIIt Quills
127-AI&amp;tlans 'n' DoiMts

IU-Illrilty Ctatty floot11
C25-~ Quilts
124-(ISJ Gifts 'n' fl&lt;namonb
123-Stitcll 'n' Pilch 011111
122-SIUff 'n' Puff Quilts
120-CIOC:htt lDITI Wt!d!GIM
119·[1SJ ~ II flow• CTOChot
116-NIIty filly Quilts
115·£Jsr ~ " ll1pplt CIOC:htl
11:1-Camplolt Gift w
1115-S.. + lllit tlllk .... ttldl
105-IIISIInt CIIChtl
102-llu...., Quilb

500 feet 992 6370

--------·
.
--·
_
for lhnt _
-~

~

!J&gt;a~•

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, ROU1e 33, No~th Of
Pomeroy Lerge lots Call

992 7479
TRAILER spaces for rent

Soulhern

Valley

MObile

Home Park, Cheshtre. Oh

992 395 • .

IOI·Qtt~t .... Cdltct1011 I

'

::
'

Proprrtr~~

$350 .00

Pets for Sale

Put a cold nose m your
future Contact your Meigs
Countv Humane Society at
992 ·6260 Available now ;
two labrador type males,
one mlntature german
shephard, male, terrter
type , chesapeake bay
,retr1ever , collte types,
black Doberman, water
span,et Caltcocat, female ;
two male tiger cats,
Amencan aomesttc cats

All Models
AvcHiable

f-I

exterror

Spectaltzing 10
lntertor
pamttng, paper hanging &amp;
textured ceilings
Free
estimates 367 7784 or 367
7160

WiJter·Sewer·E lectnc
Gas Line· Ditches
Water L1ne Hook-ups
Septtc Tanks
Countv Cert•fted

Roush Lane

949 2862
949 2160

Chesh~re, Oh

1f needed 949·2293.
Dozer work

Small jobs a

specially 742 2753

From

'12.95 &amp; up
tns1alted

2 Rolls
Rubber Sack

SHAG

Reg. tilS9S

$799

SQ.
Yd.

Cash·n·Carry

Buy Now &amp; Save S2-S6 Per Yard.
25 rolls carpet '" slock to p1ck from .
Regular backed carpet mstalled free,
w1th pad .
Dnve A L1ttle - Save A Lot

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Mam St.

742-2211

Vinyl &amp;

Aluminum Siding
e1nsulat1on
eStorm Doors
• storm w 1
· ndows
• Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate

James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772

2 4 ltc

~~~:::::::::::1:7:':'c~~===================:~:::::::::::3~23~1~m~o~
)&amp;F
THE
1

ROOFING
"Spec.ahtlng

ENTERPRISES

In

• Backhoe
• EKCavatmg
• Sept1c Systems
• water, Sewer &amp; Gas
Ltnes
L1censed &amp; Bonded

Re·R oofing"
• Small Carpenter Jobs
Darrell Brewer
PH 992 2882

DUMP TRUCK
Ph . 992 -7201
3 51 mo

Let George Mtller check
your present electnc~l
system.
R:esident.al
&amp; Commercral

Farm Buildings
S1zes
"From JOxlO"

SMALL

Utility Buildings
.

Sues from 4d to 1h40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, BoK 54
Raetne, Oh.

Call 742-3195
or 992-7680

Ph. 614-1143· 2591
6 15 ttc

2 8 tfc

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SAlES &amp; SERVICE

Electnc•l
&amp; Relrlgeration

MACHINE

Repairs ,

serv1ce,

all

makesl 992 2284 . The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy
Authortzed Stnger Sales
and Service We sharpen
SCISSOrS

W~lk
n onrnct
&amp;
rrdmg rr .. cton Pk.l\11 &amp; \e ll pro

C.rtAVEt'f'

mo,....,n
SNAt'PEif
mlh•, l&gt;r'

p..,,h I

r~t1rnq

)t: ll P!O

lr .. cto n

A II.AS fr lltn
WE EO EA fER - Srush Ck.l tltr &amp;
lrrmm~n

s 1111l

~ru~fl

lllllt:n li

11

tnm

m l.'r\
'I'

I

Vl/t; &gt;~r v (~Wild I WI.' \ell'

BOWEI!S

toasters,
all small
REPAIR irons, Sweepers,
appi 1ances Lewn mower

Next

to

State

Hrghway

Garage on Route 7 995·

3825.

AlOO Hr ,..hoel mow en

SIIMII

ELWOOD

i

T~

~"·•
!...",

KOIJNJRY
KLUB

t

"'"''"'"'

I ~"
• Goll

cnts!lr

()n

• ::::~·~~:;;·
tJ'uiMQ&amp; c nopprne
Oo~r" "'o .. O,.n
For All"''"

L~ non&gt;

l tp Qlltloly

1&gt;0911

-"'I

t il~

Enqmc'
Connor Sl

IHIOWNINli

11\'0fM

Ml.lllQ

nunllflll

~~

h\Min~ lluul\ Al•o Pro Snu fJOII (tlwtt
lotmtlot"d ,o,,,,., \hot•
We •••• ctrr w ,, complll'lf lone ol Brown

'""' SporlonQ Gooos

2·26·1 mo.

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

ALL STEEL

For all of your wir·
mg needs.

SEWING

'\"",;·

Wr oil•• 101 '" '"

Mlu.ER ELECTRIC
SERVICE

84

,01

~

lhOtl •· ~~a M~mn ''"'

3lllmo pd

WELLS

COMPLETE sevt!r tn·
stallafton &amp; backhoe ser·
vtce for Racine· Syracuse
sewer dtstnct Dozer work

INSUlATION

free Estlmoltes
P
weasonable nces
Call Howo1rd

991· 7861

Excavating

Anyt1me
•3 2 1 mo

All types at .-oot work ,
new or rcpa~r goners
and downspouts, gutter
clean1ng and pa1ntmg
All work guarantee d

992· 2606

ps 1· 304 895 3802 or 1 304·
B95 3641

from

Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-6263

ROOFING

Oomest1c and commerc1al,
pump sales and service
Tom
Lewis
Dnlling
Seasonal d1scount on pum·

CARPET
ITH PADDIN

245-9113
2 19 tfc

TRENCHING
SERVICE

Plumb1n9
&amp; Healing

WATER

KITCHEN
CARPET

12 Park St.

~==========4-==========~~=========::::!_
J&amp;L BUlWN
REESE~ H. L WHITESEL

French Ctty Patnttng
Restdenttal. commerctal,

83

KEN 'SOLES

Ph. 367 7560

1nterror,

".If c.

PWMBING
AND
HEATING

Frfe Est• mates

3 11 1 mo

2211

- ~ -- --

•

KAUFPS

'DENNEY
CHAIN LINK
FENCE

Cash 'n' Carry

lnstdlleCI

Rutfand Ot).

J&amp;C
SANITATION
SERVICE

SPRING CARPET SALE

7.99 &amp; up

~ Rf'l"S1deHittFtd

~~~~=======~t==~======jr==========~

Rutland Furniture Carpet Shop

1

LEO MORRIS
2

Home
1mprovements

82

AVATORS

. 992-5682 ., '. '.

der, power steer1ng, power
brakes, atr condittonmg,

ling Free eslimates CALL
9926190or9492614.

1 21 tfc

Hrs. : Mon. ·Fn

73
vans &amp; 4 w . o
1978 Chevy van , sox cyl!n·

Wtll do carpenter work and
rntenor or extertor patn ·

992·7144

9AM. S·30PM.

The Village of
Middleport, Oh.
Ph.
_
992 5016
or 992 _7505

2201 after 5

*

- Auto and Truck
Repair
- Transm 1SS1on
Repair

Trash P•ckup In

d1t1on,
gOOd
gasgood
mtleage.
four new
ttres,
con·
Lats of extras. Phone 742
2211 datly before s or 742

Ph. Pomeroy
614-992-7038
3lllmo

VA loans no money down
Federal Houstng J% on 525,000
5~ on balance
conventtonal Loans5%
down
Call lor tnformat1on

GARAGE

$2,600 614 985

exc cond
4205

Gene's Carpet Cleantng,
deep stream extractton
Free
estimated ,
reasonable rates , scot
chquard 992·6309 or 7A2

UJ.FIIIllGII Homt Qu~tma

• Heat Pumps
• Electnc Heatmg
&amp; Wmng
lndustnal , Commerc1a1
and Restdenttal

~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~~~~~~§@~~~~~~~~~~~
ARD

1600

New,$ 150 742 3010

U4-14 Quieti MIChlnt Qolllb

portunity hous ing 992 7721

Henry E. Clel-.nd, Jr

necessary 949·2846.

I nternatlonal

&amp; ASSOC.

Mortgage Bankers
992·7544

I ROGER HYSEll'S

Laadstar, 20ft van body , S
speed, 6 cyl , 45.000 mrles,

81

penSTYe '"'"'' Crochellh1s soH
iy femmme dress of two strands
of bedspread cotton IOJ Easter
and aHer Pan"" 7186 d11ec
Irons. srzes 2 4 6 rn cl uded
$2.00 101 each pallern Add 501
992 6260
each pattern tor lust class au
m311 and handhng Send lo:
Musical
Allco 8TODb
. 57
NHd iiCIIH llool.
.I I r
tns_tr~l!!._e~ _
The Daily Sentinel
ACCORDIAN , made rn
Italy , full siZe key bOard,
Bol 16J, CJd Ch- Sto., Now
wtth case &amp; books S125
letl. NY 10113. Pnnt Nalfft,
773·5631
Add1ns, Z1p, P1H11n Numb•
Calch on to the uaft boom• Send
101 our NEW 1981 NllDlECRAfT
CAfALOG Over 171 des1gns 3

with full basemen1. that

,.., Rental

ser•Jites

22

Sll64

ltes 111 thts pretty dreu
Qutck easy wtth a look of fl ·

~

.. ..

$675 1974 Olds 4 door
sedan.
runs,,, good.
good
1973 Ford.
ton prckup
tires $999 2 brand new
G78x15 rad1al tires, $50, ea
1 Myers water pump wtth
tank , ltke new 742-2511
days, 742 2246 nrghts

bl00dl1ne pupp1es Phone
after 5 p m '" Athens , 592

3 AND 4 RM furnrshed ap
ts Phone 992 5134

REALTOR

References

new model

sp l•fler .

,.- Cotn l.1u11drre1

With

,

AKC beagle c hamPIOnShiP

She II 101e whlllrni ott 10 paT

XR· I

...

males 742 2006

J bedroom mob1te home
Approxtmately 5 miles
tram Pomeroy or Mtd
dleporl. 992·5858

•HotWaferT•nkt

•R•nge§

--------

Oasuchand pupptes
7
weeks old S30 00 each All

al I 304 273

Phone

single stx w1th holster &amp;
carrier eKtra ,yltnder

56

992 3324

child accepted

985-3561
PARTJ AND SERVICE
ALL MAKES
•wasl1en • Drspou11
• Orr~n
• Dlsllw,ullen

1975 Datsun 8210 Call 992·
6250 after S p m
.. '"·':···
,,., ;
~12
Trucks for Sale

882 3242

2 bedroom M0b1le Home
Adults only
Brown 's
Tra11er Court, M1nersv)lle

Riwer - Plus approx
imately l acres nver
frontage on thts 75 acre
fc1rm with a 3 bedroom
home, barn, and small
pond wtth tillable and
wooded acreage. De
vetopment potent1al as
primitive camp sttes
and building s1tes Near

meon a large country lot

For Information

tor Rent
----

tor sale

Cougar

1968

CUNNINGHAM

PACQUALE

ELECTRICAL CO.

For FlU Strvrce

pm

Refrtgerator for camper,
ac and gas, S75 00 Also 25
tnch color TV tor S100 00.

Two bedroom
mobtle
home Utilities paid One

Autos tor Sale

Osborn Rd.
Reedsville, Oh.

Call Ken Young

whtte top wtth red landau
root
Am fm cassette
stereo, wrre rim wheels,
good ftres, tn very good
condition 992· 2370 after S

pany nas pools left over
from last year 16 )( 31 o d
15 x 2-t sw1m area Prtce tn
eludes pool, ftlter, deck ,
bench, ladder, and tn •
stallattan
on
normal
ground cond1t1ons Also tn·
gro"'nd pool ktts starttng at
$1695 00 Bank ftnancing
avatlable Call collect at 1
304 776·6333 or '" Ohto call

Log

Ph. 992·2094

APPLIANCE SERVICE

" Apt HQIIIf! Owners
... MobrltHomt P.llrlls

71

1

1
2 23 1 mo I

Rf!parrrnt Srnce t9Sl

~W23~2w

1
II
I

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

"Specral Raru For '

Four room house w1th bath

--Mobrle
---Homes

1o D a I e

l&lt;etp Tllrs ACI tor Future Rererenct

667 6418

$125 773 5631

and ulll•ltyroom 992 3981

NEW

Wt. have Flrutone 721s and we

tll\ help

Also one gentle

brand new w1th ve1L slip &amp;
garter, ortg $200 , sell tor

367 7811

Ca.nthelpJIOu

TIRES GOING BALD'

ALL CAJ(£
DECORATING
SUPPLIES
ANN'S CAK"'1:
DECORATING
SUPPLIES

~=========1~L=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-~J~~=====3~·~16~·~1~m~o~.

One
Holste1n
bull,
Paclamar Astronaut, bree·
ding, second generation .

SWIMMING POOLS IN
STALLED . S999 00 Com

RUGER

GOING BALD?

L ocate d nex t

brrdle . S400 .00 Phone 8B2
3242

WEDDING Gown, s•ze 10

Houses for Rent

afler 5 p m
5172

Cute lillie 2 bedroom ho

addressers

),

Housing
HeadquartPrs

NEW LISTING - Close
ln. 1 8 acres level land
with a beautiful newer 3
bedroom, 24d0 double
w1de w1tt12 baths, equ1p
ped k1tchen and uttltfY
and an added on tamtly
room w• th a wood
burner Large deck area

upkeep on this house 1

In field or shop. LOCittcl at
Maplewood Lake or c•ll
949·2285

Delight a Child!

I

l
lI

en~ov
mak•n•
OlliS
and help
fightvour
lnflal•on

gelding with saddle and

CALL 667·3146 DAY OR

wantSlO,ooo
YOU MAY NEVER
SEE THESE AND OUR
OTHER PROPERTIES
FOR SALE AGAIN.

For sate or rent. ap
prox1mlltely 34 acres wtth
three bedroom mOdular
home In Portland, Oh1o
area Nine m11es tram the
Ravenswood bridge Call

0h

2o,-•• 3o,-. OFF,

H•ll Ford Traclor rn
Pomeroy.
2 23 1 mo

Lrvestock

$250.00

-..• • Our 21st Year

Only

ACREAGE - 10 acres
of good bottom land on
state route Would make
an 1deal m i n i farm

42

12 yean
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph 992 7583
·
·

SALE

of plastercratt. You can

11 month old male colt for

VIUE. OHIO

Reasonable home wrth
acreage 2 bedrooms,
large 11vtng , and 2 por

bypass, approKimately
lA acres of nicely rolltng
land, plus Old house wtth
well , eKCellent
for
mob 11e homes or home
sites S8,SOO

New Brldye $57 ,000
NEW LISTING - Little

I 30H75 2210

~

63

lOOib. DRUM CHLORINE•l
.5 LB. ~N~IJl()"ER . .! 1.9.~'
VIsit Our Lara•
ShOwroom In

TOWN

-

clear span

all 614·294 2675 fill 8 p m

STORAGE Clearance We
will be clostno our storage
and retatl sales for the
season soon Apples afSJ 75
per bushel and up Get
yours now Fitzpatrick Or

10-20% OFF ALL
SWIMMING POOLS

1978

H1llcresf mobtle home
with J bedrooms and 2
baths Looks l1ke new
Also has a ut1ltty room
built on

Rt 7

LISTING
Panoramic \ltew of the

WANTED · The fOllOWing

12

dnlled well and large
barn

General

POMEROY,O.
. '192-2259

The West V Irginia National
Guard is no ordinary part

Racine area.

FIREWOOD
S30
load
Splr1 &amp; delivered 992 5240

EARLY BIRD
SALE!

home wtth 2 65 acres
Built 1n kttchen, central
heat. and large ltv tng
rm w11h slldtng glas

7

• R ooftng work

College Rd .

5 Y ra c use,

Mon.·Wed 10 00·9 co
Tues.-FrT. Sat .
IO·OO·S 00
Closed Thursdays
Stop 1n and see our line

POOL CO.

LISTING
Modern J bedroom

Six room house and bath
With uttl1ty room
City
water and gas S150 00 per
month with S50 00 depos1t
Located on Nye Av-e Call

graduate, you may Qualify.

needed!

Misc. Merchanise

ROGER HORNSBY

NEW

,ches On SR
$12,000

steel

b ur'ld'ongs 11 24 x 44 x 10 for
$2 995 00 30 X 4B
12 f
'
or
S3,992
00 40 x 72 xX 1 ~ for
$6,339 00 48 x 96 x 14 for
58,881 00 Call collec1 today

chards, Slate Roule 689
669 3785

RACINE - large home
wtth 5 bedrooms Looks
nlce and has character
appeal Has a large lot
and ts near schools and
stores

41

Some part t1me jobs in Pt
Pleasant come with a
S1.500 bonus~ Plus free
college tuttton • 1f you are
age 17 or older, a junior or
senior tn h1Qh school, or a
high
school
diploma

Envelope

54

All

Phone
1-( 614) -992-3325

OF

JOYCE ELECTRICAL
SUPP
LIES

THE DABBLE SHOP
NOW OPEN

dition $16.50 00 949·2216 or
992 5545.

I 800·624 8511

1'- -------------,.------------'
9

T

767 3167 or 557 3411

VIRGIL B. SR • t ... , , rr ~
16 E. Second Street

992 5869

Carol Day 518·489 83'15.

The Mental Health Center is a Private, Non· Profit
Corporatton lind an Equal Opportunity/ Affirmative
A chon Employer

Signed the Dravo Corp .. Alhens, OH 594 4221.
Apple Grove Plan1, Box
428, Racine, Oh .
·
wanted to Buy class rings,
LOOK for hand sign Miss wedding bands. anything
Hope, Palm Readrng . Tells stamped, lOK . 14K, or 18K
you past, present and gold. Silver colns1 pocket
future, gives advise on lowe watches Call Joe Clafk at
affa i rs,
business
&amp; 992·2054 a1 Clark's Jewelry
marriage
If you are Slore, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
unhappy &amp; don' t ~now

ter way ~t . 2, &lt;13&lt;40 Ohio
River Rd ., Huntlnglon,
w v
1 30• · 523 · 7121
Reading $10. save $3.00
wrth ad By phone on

Acreage One llcre and one
half of ground located bet ·
ween old Rt 33 and new Rt
3J factng the
Me1gs
Fatrgrounds S•OOO 00 992

2156 or 992·2157 .

Antiques

pay cash or certtf1ed check
for anttques and col!ec
t1bles or enttre estates
Nothing too large Also,
guns, pocket watches and
cotn collecttons Call 614

1972 Regency 12 x 60 two
SYRACUSE
Total
bedroom mobtle home, new
electric home near the
stove and refngerator, new
'c'arpet,' nc1tu~t Qas ~a, , •. pooJ .. and .. playground .
Has 3 bedrooms, 2
washer and dryer . 992 6711 .
baths
Garage, and
large yard A ntce horne
for juSl S43,5oo
3L __Lots &amp; Acre-.ge

TRAILER I: OT for sale,
$4,000 00 992 2571

Household GOOds

trlc
range
Avacado
$125 00 991 5954 afler 4
p.m

ATTENTION ·
liM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will

General

NEW LISTING -

tensive remodeling
• Electrical work

r~======3=l=l=l=m=o=:t;:::::::=::::2:·2~3~1;m~o~f=====~2~2~3=l~m~o~.~

lnternattonal Cub Ca'd et, 12
hp, hydrostatic drive, 42 tn·
ch mower tn QOOd con·

Signature double oven elec ·

EAFORD[B

OUT

SFC O'Neal675 3'1.50.

NO Tresspasstng on the
Oravo Corp. property (Old
Tr t·State Material Corp OLD COl NS, pocket wot·
property I All VIOlators will ches, class r ings, wedding
be prosecuted There will bands, diamonds. Gold or
be no e)(cepttons to fhls A silver Call J A Wamsley,
watchman will be on duty Treasure Chest Coin Shop,

wh1Ch way to turn , come in
tor adwlce, one visit will
convince you there is a bet

GET VALUABLE lramlng
as a young busmess person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen
ttnel route earner Phone
us right awav and get on
the eiiQibtllty list at 992·

R.N. posit1on '" lO-bed acute care psychtatrlc unit
usmg Interdisciplinary approach Poslhve working
environment w1th excellent fringe benefits, in·
cludmg continuing education and tuition reimburse·
ment. Flex1ble scheduling w1th every other
weekend off (minimum) . For more 1nformahon
contact the Personnel Office, Gallia · Jackson- Meig~
Community Mental Health Center, 412 VInton PUce
Gallipolis, OH, 45631. Phone No (614) 446-SSOO .
'

Sl

doors 10 the palio Good
12 x 52 mobile home tn gOOd
condi t lon w1th the un
derptnntng
tncluded
Located at 162 Loscust
Street, Upper Monkey Run ,
Pomerov , Ohto

~

COMMUNITY MENTAL
HEALTH NURSING

SHOOT ,

new

PMC,

1971
H1ilcrest
Mobile
Home
lst tratler on
Harrtsonvtlle Rd

benefttst For details call
11

IJJ ,

1970

Pleasant, wv Phone 675
4424

11

HOME

two

6),

12 x 60. two bedrooms, new
carpet B x s Sales, 1nc ,
2nd x V1and Street, Po1nt

and dtnmg room suite.
Must be in good condttlon
and reasonable 992· 39.41

FRIENDLY

12sx

bedrooms, bath &amp;

New, used, and antique fur·
n1ture No item to large or
to small Wtll buy one piece
or complete households
Mart1n's General Store at

11me job' GOOd pay, gOOd

'----'-"=====-'---

dress ahd T111e, Oate of Ap·

W'"'"d

IJ Noo" 51 turd~

OF FIDU

The to11ow1ng persons
were, on the dales shown,
appo.nted toadm1n1ster the
tollow1ng
decedents'
estates pendtng 1n the
M e tgs County Probate
Court
FJduclary's Name, Ad

AUCTION

WVa

shot guns only Open sights

•TRANSPORTATION

e REAL ESTATE

.~ . ,

Faclory chOke 12 guage

IC- Hoi'f I Gr~rn
l l- Sited &amp; Ftrtrluer

U - Prolettrontl

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

""' ............ .' .
-~=~~::::~~;;;:::_

every Sat . n1ght 6 JO p m
at their building in Bashan

tJ- L. ... ntock

Opporhmrlr
n - Mo"er to Lotn

13123, ltc
_,, ',,, .,

shot gun &amp; rifle malch

tl - f=•rm Equrpme"r
•1 - WI"'td to lur

eFINANCIAL

27
28 _ _ _ _ _ _ __
29 _ _ _ _ _ __
30 _ _ _ _ _ __

1 5 - - - -- - - 16 _ _ _ _ _ __

Me1gs Coun1y
Board of
Comm1sstoners

• FARM SUPPLI E&gt;
&amp; LIVESTOCK

&amp; CB Rept.r
11 - Winled To Do

Q,.,_

1 PAY h•ghesl prices
possible for gold and sliver

Clerk

POMEROY
LANDMARK

Route 160
Btdwell , Gal!ta County,
POMEROY
Oht04S614
~LANDMARK
tn accordance w1th the
plans and speCif1cat1ons,
m-2111
and all Contract Documen
E . Mam St
Pomerow
ts
contarned
here1n ,
prepared bY
Koe Krompecher
Ar
Lost and Found
6
ch1tects
499 Richland Ave
Stolen . Purse ; taken from
Athens, OH 45701
Plans and spectflcat•ons a Lincoln Conttnentc11 bet
may be p1cked up at the ween 12 and 12 ·30 at 1638
Stdwell Residence or the Li ncoln Hetghts had been
Archttect on depostt of Ten on the front sear May keep
Dollars i$10 001 for eac h the money , please return
se t Such depostt wtll not be rest, no questtons asked .
refunded
Btds shall be
sealed and addressed ro rne Lay on the front porch at
1638 or 1687 Lincoln Herghls
Owner
The owner reserves the after dark or anyt1me Per
nght to re\ect any or atl son will be prosecuted ts
b1ds 1n Who e or 10 part, to purse IS not returned
watve anv tnformalit tes in
the b1ds rece tved, or accept -~--::--:c;~;-:-;--any btd whtch 1t deems 8Public Sale
favorabl e
&amp; Auct10n

" B•Iumrnous B•ds "
6 - Proposals are to be

returned on b td forms sup
pl1ed by the Me1gs county
Comm •sstoners,
whtch
may be obtatned through
the off1ce of the Metgs
County Engtneer, or Board
of Me1gs County Com
mlsstoners. and will be
opened on the date and
place spectfred above
7 - The Metgs County
Commtsstoners reserve the
nght to accept or retect
any or all bids or anv part
thereof

Free
Soil
Test
while you wait.
March 27, 19 '81
9 a.m.-4 p . m.

RENOVATION OF BID
WELL RESIDENCE
Rt I. Bo&lt; 398, Slate

3

Mary Habstetfer,

MlrCt'llr1Cirte

U -.- lhllldrn9 Supphn
~Ptll lor Stll

1S- 5010011 tn"rucr ro n
,._
lbdro , TV

14 - - - - - - - - -

Goocls

PUBLIC NOTICE

Sealed bids will
rece•ved b y Buckeye Com
mun1t{ servtces at 1fs of
ftce a 166 Pearl St , P 0
Box 604. Jackson, OH unttl
1 30 p m Tuesday , March
31. 1981 and at that ttme
opened as prov1ded by law ,
for
the
turntsh1n g
necessary
labor
and
matenals r equtred for the
renovat1on of the followtng
pro1ec1

tatmng each bid the name
and address of the vendor
must be p1a1n1y marked

SJ- Antrques

Trtrn rn t

JI - Homlllar

lhnt

u - CB, rv R•dro Eq.,rpmen •

1l - 5rlutlf'd W1nl1d
11 lnsurlnct

These cash ra tes
•nclude d•scount

requested tn Item 1. at the
same pnces to all town·
shtps of Me1gs County

duf"'_9J~e~~~deyn"v"e'iope con

e MERCHANDISE
~1 - HoU\II!Oid

Prtces on th1s shall

be frrm and .n eflect from
Aprrll. 19Bl1o Aprd I. 1982

~~ - FRoom5

tt - Htlp Wtllll!d

actual
quant1t1es of
b•tumtnous matenals to be
furn1sl"led , but eacn sue
cessful vendor shall be
requtred to furntsh aU or
anypartoftheMetgsCoun
ty Highway Department's

actual
requoremenls
as or
dered dunng
the btd year

41- Sp•utor Rent
41 - Wtnltd to Ren t
41- E4u•pment tor Rent

•EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

•~ - Bu~men

tor

44- Ap•rtment

9 Wanted to Buy

25 _ _ _ _~-26. _ _ _ _ _ __

SPECIFICATIONS FOR
THE BIOS, AS FOLLOWS :

lhe Court House. '" the

lor Rl'nl

1- Pubhc hie
&amp; Aucrron

21 _
--------------13
_ _ _ _ __
24 _ _ _ _ _ __

b1tumtnous matenals for
the Metgs County Htghway
Department
Esttmated
quant1t1es at ltQVId asphalt
requrred , approxtmatelv
500,000 gallons

VENDORS
Sea led btds wrll be
rece1ved by th e Board of
Me19s
County
Com
m•SStoners, at he Com
m1SS10ners Offtce, located

e RENTALS

LANDMAAK'S
LAWN &amp;
WNIC

PubliC Nottce-

'I

Sentmel ClaSSified Dept .

1- Y•rdS•IIP

17 _ _ _ __
lH . _ _ _ _ _ __
19 _ _ _ _ _ __
10 _ _ _ _ _ __

+:;:::;~~$.$.~~~~~~~;;;;:=~;;;;;~~==~~=-~

P bl N 0
u "
ce
NOTICE TO
BITUMINOUS

VHiage of Pomeroy, Ohto
unttl12 noon on the Jist day
of March, 1981, and the btds
will be opened at 2 PM on
the 31st day of March 1981 ,
tor tne turntshtR.CI of

45769. Or

Problems or Questions . Now buyrng gold and
silver, old pocket watches,
about Lawns or
chains, dtamonds, silver
mone'; and coms. Martin's
General Store, Middleport
Gardens? For Answers 992
6370
Bring Them To
Bedroom furn1ture, t v M!t,

~~~~~~~~

1 - B1d pnce per gallon
to b vendor's plant, and
the pnce per gallon
delt\lered to the v-endor ' s
portable tank to any
locaf1on w1th1n the county,
deS19nated by the County
Engtneer, for the vanous
grades at bttum1nous
matenals wh tch may be
requtred by the Metgs
county H1ghwar Depart·
ment. whtCh sha I conform
to the pert1nent State of
Ohto, Department of the
Htghway ConstruCtiOn and
Matenal Spec1f1cattons
2 - Wtth respect to the
aforementioned esttmated
quant1hes, the vendors
shall understand that no

In

NOW TILL EASTER 20%

Pomeroy, OH
call 992· 7760

pel. 1971 Cameron. 14 &lt; 64,

Quality Producls
Reasonable Pnces

Ph. 992-3104

992 3996 .

Cl•ll•., ... """

Headquarters

Mob1le Homes
tor Sate

CONSTRUCTION
e New Homes- ex·

Re51dent1a1 &amp; L•ght
Commerc1al ElecJncal
""Dpltes

R heem, Amana
&amp; Carrier
AIR CONDITIONERS
&amp; HEAT PUMPS
Ph . 614-992·7031

Gravely
tractor
and
mower Newly overhauled

Phone 742-3092
Real Estate

ROUSH

949·2129
$3500
.00 . Phone 992 60&lt;40 or [

Housing

two bedrooms, new carpet.
1972 Champton. 12 w 60, two
bedrooms, new carpet . 1976
Cameron, 12 x 60, . twa
bedrooms , all electrtc. 1971

..a inch mower.

tractor and

53

1973 Crown Haven, lot K 65.
three bed1ooms, new car·

992 6370

JUDGE
COMMON
PLEAS COURT ,
PROBATE
DIVISION ,
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
131 23, lie

41 - HouH'~

9

•

1:

Account of Elmora E
Bo tce and Ramora C
Young . Executors of the
Estate of Raymond E
Botce, Deceased
Unless excepttons are
fried be
thereto,
satd accounts
Wtll
for h.ear1ng
before
satd Court on the 21s.t dav

PhOne I 304·882 3410

Oh 991 2751

22593 Frnal

1- C.IIrd ot T111rllu
l4S•-

11

•'

CASE NO

IRON AND BRASS BEDS ·

12 horsepower Cub Cade1

room, eQuipped kllchen,

PRIVATE
settrny,
3
bedroom home on s R 7
near Memory Gardens 2'12

Old furniture , desks, gold
rtngs.
1ewe1ry, silwer
dollars, sterling, etc. Wood
ice boxes, 1c1rs, antiques,
etc complete households,
Write · MD Miller, Rt ~.

off paint, 30% off green
ware Orehel's CeramiCS,
59 N 2nd Ave , Mtddleport,

F1nal

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

11-

I •

'

22801

111 Court St., Pomero.,., 0., 45769

,,

,I

CASE NO

Account of Josephtne L
Boltnger, Adm1n1stratr.x of
the Estate of Harry o
Boltnger, Deceased
CASE NO 22964 Parttal
Account of Ruby Crouch
Adm1n1stratr1K of the
Estate of Forrest C Sum
mers, Deceased

PHONE 992• 2156

eANNOUNCEMENTS

I

Account of Norman W
Johnson, Admtntstrator ot
the Estate of Naomt F
Johnson , Deceased

WANT AD INFORMATION

· Address

I
I

23308 Final

1- - · - - - - - ----.:.....-----------,"l

Wnte your own ad~and order by m ad wtth fhrs
coupon Cance l 0
d b
results Money 0 6, r~~u~dabfe phon~ w en you get

Pnn t one word tn eac h
space below Each m
1tial or group of ftgures
counts as a word Count
name and address or
phone number 1f used
You II get better results
tf you descrtbe fully ,
gJve pr iCe . The Senttnel
reserves the nght to
classtfy, ec:11t or re1 ect
any ad Your ad wtll be
put In
the proper
c lastftcat1on 1t you' ll
check the proper box
below

Matern1ty Clothes at at
fordable pnces Nurstng
bras and gowns . Water
melon Patch, 5th and Main,
New Haven, West Virg1nic1

with

bedroom

Large two story home
on front street Owner
wtll ftnance atlO%
G1ve us a call We have
several Land Contract
propert1es.
Cheryl Lemleyj Assoc.
Phone 742 -3171
Velma Nlc1nsky, Assoc .

Homes for Sale

32

3

mg $41,000 00
LAND CONTRACT -

Beautiful three bedroom

Announcements

3

and Frnal Account of Mar
tha Childs Trustee Under
the
Las t Wtll
and
Testament of Bert•e N
Wafts, Deceased

~--

Meigs Counly , Oh•o. for ap

I Name
' .I!

:I
I
,' I
' I
! I

Publtc Not1ce

CASE NO

acres

ELECTRICAL
SUPPLIES

GAUJA
REFRIGERATION
INC.

Harogator;

Int. traclor, 986. 304-675·
2245 .

bedroom, living room,
dlntng kttchen comb ,
bath,ut1lity, carpprf on
laQrge corner lot" Ask·

than for the money
References 992 2830

Jeffrey Ury assigned----------

Dunham · tot'

home, bath, large living

Wanttclto Do

Furnace repairs, electrical
work, plumbing, mobile
home or residence. 992

Infant Martin

CASE NO 20478 Seventh

Public Not1ce

Savel
II
•

II
1
:

part thereat

Curb I nfla tl•on.
p ay cas h f or
ClaSSI•tl•edS and

-_ ,1

•:

nght lo accepl or re1ect
any or all btds a nd/ or any

the esttmated aggregate
ma x1mum amounts of
public funds subject to the
con trol of sa1d Board to be
ACTIVE depOSitS at any
ttme durtng the per.od of
deS19nat1on
IS
Three
Mtllton Ftve Hundred
Thousand
Dollars

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT,
PROBATE
DIVISION,
MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
" BE IT RESOLVED 1na1
IN THE MATTER OF SET
~-------------------·-·-· 1 TLE MENT OF AC
COUNTS. Probate Court ,

t

'

tam tng the btd, the name
and address of the vendor
must be shown and plamly
marked " Aggregate B tdS'
6 - Proposals are to be
returned on btd forms sup
plies by the ve ndor and
wtll be opened on the date
and place spect fted above
7 - The Metgs County
Commtsstoners reserve t he

---Public Not1ce --

~

pro•

beautiful

Infant Willford

Disc. ; fer1. auger; 1 ..,t
snap on 15 5x38 dual 11res;
N H. 367 Ma~ure Spreder:

Askmg S-49,500 AlSo, ap-

992 21&lt;13.

U

·Business Services

Farm Equipment

Kuker 400 gal. spray; Int.
5«&gt;, .t)(16" plows; M.F 13'.5'

acres wiTh lovely home,
1,47 sq ft. comfortable
living, l bedroom, 13/ ..
bath, central air, utility

IN ·

acres Terms 992 · 77~1

Pubhc Noflce

.,

ACREAGE - Approx. 6

AU TOMDBI LE
SU RANCE been
celled?
Lost

'I

' ''

.,.,,."'"

. Broker

13

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads

I

_ ..........." ' '.

by Larry Wright

HOBSTETTER REALTY

992· 2571 or I 687·6429

..

KIT 'N' CARLYLE '"

remodeling

work, -floors, doors, wall

WilLFORD
Sgt. and Mrs. Kevin Willford are
announcing the birth of their second
child, a daughter, bom Feb. 28at the
Mtn. Home A1r Force Base Hospital
in Mtn. Home, Idaho. The infant has
been named Kristen Ann. She
weighed eight pounds,IO OIJIIces
Maternal grandparents ~re Mr.
and Mrs. Eldon Rodberg, West Palm
Beach, Fla. Paternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Harry Willford,
Racme. Mr and Mrs. W1Uiord
whose address 1s 4234 F South
Mellon, Mt. Home AFB, Idaho 83648,
have a son, Michael. five .

General

Ovr Spt:Cidlly

f&gt;omrroy Otl

-Addonsand
remodeling
- Roofing and guner
work
- Concrete work
-Piumbmg -.nd
electncal work
&lt;Free Estimates)

V.C. YOUNG II
992 6215 or "2 7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

BISSELl
SIDING CO.
"Beautiful, Custom
Bu11t Garages"
Call for free Sldtng
est1mates, 949-2801 or

949· 2860

No Sunday Calls

3 11 tfc

~.!:::======~J~&gt;='~m;'::!.~==========:

IVIRYBODY Shops the
WANT AD WAY

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
.

Pege-lG-The Daily Sentinel

.

Fire damage set at $500

Area deaths
Thomas Young
Thomas Young, 67 , Rt. I ,
Guysville, died Saturday at
O'Bleness Hospital, Athens,
following an extended illness.
Mr. Young was born at Cabin
Creek, W. Va., the son of the late
Liddie Charles and May Wood
Young. His wife, Garnette died in
Aug. 1980. He was also preceded in
death by one daughter, two sons,
lour brothers and two sisters.
He was a fanner coal miner and
employe of the Pennsysvania
RailrOad and had been a farmer the
past 24 years since moving to Ohio.
He is survived by three daughters,
Ivalea Young at home; Judy Sheets,
Nelsonville, and .Mrs. Robert
(Kathy) Anderson, Guysville; five
sons, Jinunie at home ; Donald and
Harold, Guysville; Gary Robert of
Trimble and Paul of Nelsonville;
three brothers, Bernard of Milan ;
Oscar of Inez, Ky ., and Curtis of
Obetz, ·ohio; four sisters, Arizonia
Stepp, and Goldie Stepp both of
Mesa, Ariz., Alma McCoy, Louisa ,
Ky., and Haley Dillon of Ft. Ga., W.
Va.; 13 grandchildren and three
great grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
Tuessay at I p.m. at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville, with the
Rev. Ralph Smith officiating. Burial
will be in Asbury Cemetery. Friends
may at the funeral home anytime.

Employment big topic

Mrs. Chevalier was born at
Helvetia in Randolph County, W.
Va ., the daughter of the late John
Jacob and Mary Ann Zumbach. She
was also preceded in death by ~er
first husband, Charles R Jeffers
and her second husband, J . H.
Chevalier, one son and one
daughter.
She was a former member of the
German Reform Church of Helvetia
and Lawrence Chapel Methodist
Church, Guysville.
She is survived by one daughter
and son-in-law, Harold B. and Graco:
Jeffers Griener, Guysville; one
sister· in-law, Gertrude Monroe
Zumbach, Charleston; one brotherin-law, J . A. Depoy, GuysviUe, and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services wiU he held Wednesday at 11 a.m. at the White
Funeral ·Home, Coolville, with the
Rev. Guy White Officiating. Burial
wiU be in Vanderhoff Cemetery.
Friends may call at the fWieral
homeafter2p.m. Tuesday.

A-riaNs UVI!S'I'OCdALES

Albuy, o.to
llardttl, ..l
CA'ITUl PRICES'

' Feeder Steers: (Good alld Choice ) :JOO.:iOO lbs.
6t.zs.69; 500-70011:11. M.:I0-60.n .
FeederHeifen: ( Goodand D'K&gt;ice ) ~ lbs.
~ .5H2 ; 501).700 lbs.
Feeder llulll ' !Good and Clloicel lbs.
60.:.He.50, 500-700lbo. 5l . ~ .li!.
SbiUilUr8alls: (Over 1,0110 lbl.) 49 , ~2. 25 .

- .Iii.

Sllug!lter COWs : Utilllia 12 .....7.60 ; Canners

andCUUenH-42." Spririjj:~r Co'fl1! : (By the Puund ) 4+-49.60.
Cow ahd C. If Palra: (By the Wlil) SCJ0..6$$.
Veala : (Choice and Prime ) ea.&amp;\.
Baby Cllves : (By the twadl 116-107.50.

HOG PRl&lt;.:&gt;:S'

. Hogs: (No. I, Barrow and Gllta ) ~230 lb.s. 3838. 7~ .

Butcher Sow3 t7 .50-33.75.

Butcher Bean;: 31-.\t.
(By the head ) 12-37 .

F~rPitiJ :

Damages were set at $500 as the
result of a lire at an WlOCCupied
residence owned by Jolm and Edna
HunneU at 10:09 p.m. Sunday.
Twenty-eight Pomeroy firemen
answered a caD to the scene at 405
Spring Ave. The fire was kept contained to an upstairs bedroom. It
was reported by a neighbor. The
blaze was believed to have been
caused by an authorized person in
the empty house. There is insurance.
Pomeroy firemen also answered a
call to the Jerry Hubbard IWme on
Route 681 in the Darwin area at 5:52
p.m. Saturday to extinguish a brush

fire . Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles
Legar said the fire, which burned
about one acre, was under control
when Pomeroy firemen arrived.

The Pomeroy-Middleport Lions
Club wiU meet in regular session at
noon Wednesctay at the Meigs Inn.

Couple given divorce
Joyce Riffle was granted a divorce
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court from Donald.C. Riffle.

SHEEP PIUCES'

Marriage license

ROSE BUSHES
EXCEu.ENT QUALITY, fiELD GROWN
AND FERTILE POrno VARIETIES

repairs.
The superintendent explained that
the district is now sending four miUs
Qf lax money approved years ago to
the state when actually two and onehalf miUs could be retained locally
and would provide the additional
million dollars for the district.

· PATENTED
FOIL PACKED
Cynthia
Firelight
Friendship
New Day
Oregold
Promise
Snowfire
Tempo

NON-PATENTED PATENTED
FOIL PACKED
REDI·PLANT
'·

Chicago Peace
Diamond Jubilee
Garden Party
Peace
Tiffany
White Swan
·Blaze
Crimson Glory
Royal Gold

Love
White Ligtening ·
American Pride
Bing Crosby
Fragrant Cloud
John F. Kennedy
Madras
New Day
Smokie

SELECT YOURS NOW ON THE J st FLOOR

Haul
AwaJ

MASON·, W.' VA.

SPECIALS GOOD MARCH 23-21

NOT RESPONSIBU FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS

CHUCK ROAST

BOLOGNA

• oz. .

·1·~.
73~.

"

69

SUPERIOR BACON

GROUND BEEF

•1 09 LB.

$139 LB.

DEL MONTE
WHOLE KERNAL

RINSO

CORN

•225

..

Plan now for your re•
tlrement. Open an
Individual Retirement
Account at the1
Farmers Bank.

'100
3 170Z.
CANS
FROSTING

d

:)u b:&gt; t,mlrrtl

5 LB. HUDSON·CREAM

CREMORA
.,99

FLOUR

lllf:re'i l Uul ldl l y tS rf1qu rlt:Hl f Or eoH iv vvrltt

rtrr+w,t '

~

Farmers
Bank
Your Community
. Owned Bank

•1·19

oz.

22

BORDEN'S

lll dr vtdUdl R tJ !HP rllt-'11! /.....• t'U u ltb ,ire 'i il vlllQ ~ r t-r1d lt It:'!. &lt;i lld •h

i-&gt;u&lt;..:h

LB.

12

LEAN

KING SIZE

I.

March

in like a lion
out like a ~-..

lamb

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Hunt
set for
Aprill9asand
PaulmemBar- I~~~~~~~~~~::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
nett was
welcomed
a new
~
ber.
· Hilnk qeland, president, reports
that the club also has been adviSed
that the ciub next school year wiU
have an exchange student from
Sweden. She is lf&gt;-year-old Eva
Johansen .
Following the meeting the boar.d .
of directors met to discuss expenditure of funds .

You

POM£ROY--OLUORT
PT. PLWANT -WEST UNION

JACKSON PERKINS

A marriage license was issued to
Don Michael King, 20, Cleves, and
Judy Kay Jacks, 18, Pomeroy.

UnitedMethodistChurch,approved
plans for their annual Easier Egg

LONDON-HOI~

•

Just Received

Slallljhler~ .

Voters wiU decide on the bond
issue on June 2. Meigs Auditor
Howard Frank and members of the
district's board of education have
approved the plan. AU of the
preliminary work has been carried
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , out and the next step will he to
secure permission from the Ohio
Department of Education to keep
the funds locally rather than sending
We Will Be Selling
the present four mills of taxes to the
Store Tables And Counters In Mason
state.
The Rotarians, meeting at Heath
Store Tues. March 24 And Wednesday

Morning March 25 Ideal Tables For
Laundry Or Worll Shop Plus
Wall $helvlng.

Lions to hold meeting

SUPPLEMENT TO THE:
M·ad l son Press , Sentinel,
Shopper's Review, Pt Pleasant
Register, Dally Sentinel &amp; Peable's
Messenger.

JACISON-WEWTOW ·McARTHUR
WAUERLY-N~W WIINGTON

ELBERFELD$

Gleason explains bond issue

MIDDLEPORT-Aspects of a bond
issue which will provide a million
dollars for the Meigs Local School
District were presented by Supt.
David L. Gleason to members of the
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club
Friday night.
Supt. Gleason supported his
presentation with slides and
Emma S. Chevalier
photographs showing conditions of
school
buildings in the district and
Emma~· Chevalier, 89, Lottridge,
pointing
out that the money could be
died Sunday evening at Arcadia
used
to
such an advantage in the
Nursing Home following an exdistrict
by providing funds for
tended illness.

The VIII'Wy of ~ open
women In relaUCII to edlniiG1181
backgrowld will be clilcuMed et a
meeting of the Mei&amp;l ChaptA!r of the
American Aa8oclatl111 ofl]nlverslty
Women to be held at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the Meigs Inn. ·
Barbara Knlt!bt, attorney, will
serve as moderator of a panel to be
featured for the program. Making
up the group will be Dr. Margie
Lawson, dentist; Tunle Redovtan;
estimator for an electric company;
Mindy Hlll, a heavy equipment
operator, and Celia McCoy, teacher.
High school girls of the entire·
COWity are invited to attend the
meeting.

to

OZ. MORTOrt

TV DINNERS

79'

'1"

WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
MARCH 25th, 26th, 27th &amp; 28th

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