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                  <text>Church ·takes contract to miners

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bv Dick Cavalll1

WINTHROP
IF 'IOU caJLO HA\IE: ONE
WI6H,WI-IAT
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WOULD YOU WISH R::R~

By Tile Anoclated Preu
With voting a day away, United
Mine Workers President Sam Church headed Into the West Virginia
coalfields today for a "real donnybrook" with striking miners who
have branded a proposed new con-

'- t'D WI5H TO Be MARRIED
TO 11-4E NC6T BEAL.lTl FLJL~RI-IN "'THE WORLD...

tract a sellout."
11

HI5 MONet it:&gt; IN5URE
e=veRL.A6TINq f'66..CE ...

left, Sullday ID JleWm, Ky. Tile ll1ralag miDen are
ae' to vo&amp;e oa a propG&amp;ed coldract on Tuesday. (AP

llllea to the UMW pmldeal Sam Cburcb, aecoad from

LuerpbGto).

HE c:n=T6 AN AWFUL- LOT OF
MILEA6'E OUT OF ONE= WleH.

... AND PLeNTY W EAT/
AND ~D HEALll-1,

WHO WOWI-0 :SPS'-ID Al-L-

MINER8 MEETING - Memben ol the Ualted
Mille Woden Local 74Zi gather ID lbe Wlloa baD to

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IN THE WORLD.
Voi.2'1,No. ·241
Copyrighted 1981

Clwrch was winding up a five-day
tour through the eastern coal states
to support the proposed pact with
~lings in Charleston, W.Va., and
Beckley, W.Va., the hearts of the
UMW's two largest districts.
The burly union president predicted tense meetings with angry
miners who have broken up other
meetings and burned copies of the
contract. The UMW's 160,000
striking miners vote Tueadsy on the
tentative agreement with the
Bituminous Coal Operators
Association.
Church, who started hill tour with
predictions that the contract would

be approved by a two-thirds
majority, said Sunday he is "stili optimistic it's going to pasa."
"If the contract ill read and
studied, and our people work under
it, it will help our organlzation if
they will only give it a chance," he
said.
UMW officialS in several states
predic!A!d Tuesday's election will be
decided by a "silent majority" and
not the militant groups who have
picketed and heckled Church on hill
tour.
"They (miners) make up their
.minds for themselves. They're
direct people who go their own
way," said Denny Deskins, a UMW
official in Welch, W.Va.
The prop&lt;lSed contract provides
for a 36 pei'CO!ut increase in pay and
benefits over three years. Critics
contend it will weaken the union by
ending a royalty paid by coal companies to the UMW on purchases of

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industry.

"They're scared of .turning the
contract down. They're afraid of a
long strike," said John Darcus, a
senior official in UMW District 31.
"They're going to take a chance with
the contract becaUBe they're afraid
they may not get another one."
Walt Murray, an Ohio miner, said
"I have a gut feeling that it will pau
nationwide. The economy is bad,
and people are afraid, and the coal
operators know it."
other miners predict the contract
will be defeated. "The feeling looked
to me like it's about 99 to 1 against
the contract," said Larry Vucellch,
another Ohio miner. ·

en tine
1 section, 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, March 30, 1981

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non-union coal.
Although many union leaders have
declined to forecast the outcome of
the election, a growing number of of.
ficials say the contract will be
ratified becaUBe of the poor economy
and high unemployment in the coal

15 Cents

A Multl"'edia Inc . Newspaper

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Simmons h11ys Pomeroy Motor Co.

Ed Sullivan

Prisci Ia's Po

HOLLYWOOD - After spending nearly $3 million on an advertising
blitz to promote the nominees, the fUm industry is awaiting the results
of tonight's Academy Awards with visions of bulging box-office receipts.
The best-picture award often means an extra f5 million to $10
million at the box office, according to industry experts, as well as increaaed revenue from television, cable and other markets.
Film companies attempted to sway Academy voters by spending
between 12 million and $3 million on trade paper advertisements,
special screenings and the like during the past weeks. After the awards are aMounced, new ads will tout the winners.

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KITE AND IM GOING
OJT AND FLY IT.'

ro-lE 11-115· SINCE
I WAS A KIP.'

WOULD BE G::XX7

FOR MY '50Ul .'

Academy awards set tonight

Most troublesome case begins
NEW YORK - Prosecutors beset by nilings of government entrapment face their most troublesome Abocam case todsy with the
trial of Sen. Harrison A. WUliams Jr., the most powerful politician indicted in the FBI sting.
Williams was one of the first to meet with undercover FBI agents
posing as representatives of favor-seeking Arab sheiks, but the 61year-old New Jersey Democrat Willi the last to be indicted.
Prosecutors face an uncertain task in the courtroom this time since
a federal judge in Philadelphia last year threw out the convictions of
two Philadelphia city council members on grounds of governmental
misconduct and entrapment.

THAT SHON5
HOW MUCH YOJ
KM::NY A60UT
KI'TE·RYING .'

Indianian found guilty in death
ELLEFONTAINE, Ohio - A 24-year old Whltestdwn, Ind., resident
has been found guilty of vehicular homicide in the Dec. 11, 1980, desth
of a Springfield man:
Franklin D. Rose had been accUBed by the State Highway Patrol of
"negligently causing the death" of Richard Wil.liams, 54, in a tw&lt;H:ar
crash on Ohio33, just north of the Logan-Champaign county line.
Municipal Judge Thomas E. O'Connor Jr. ruled that the evidence
showed Williamson was driving south when hill auto was struck headon bY the Rose car which was traveling north in a southbound lane.

Dog, teenager save baby
RAVENNA, Ohio - Thanks to a barking dog and an alert teen-ager,
' an abandoned newborn boy i.s alive and under the care of nurses and
doctors at Robinson Memorial Hospital.
,
·
Laurie Weaver, 18, a Ravenna High School senior, found the infant
·
early 8aturd8y morning outside on a Ravenna sewer grate.
A nurse at the hospital said the Infant was probably about two hours
old when found. The unnamed baby was in satisfactory condition early
this morning at the hospital.

Signatures oppose increase
CINCINNATI - The Ohio Public Interest Campaign, a consumer
lobbying group, has targeted Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric Co. in its drive
to reward energy conservation with lower gas and electric rates.
OPIC has collected 13,000 signatures opposing CG&amp;E's rate increase, which was approved March 18 by the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio. The groups plans to petition state regulators and
CG&amp;E executives to restructure the utility's base rates.

Skeleton that of Ohio girl

"18&amp;lllrt HOW 81U. YWE WERE BACK IN
n4E 01.0 DAYI WHIN WE WORRIED .ABOUT
WHAT WE CALLED INFLATION?"
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"PRINCE IS CRAZY ABOUT THIS ON&amp;I IT COMES IN THREE
FLAVORS: BEEF, LIVER AND HOUIE-11.~1"

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WEEKI WACHEE, Fla. - A skeleton uncovered in the back yard of
a sex offender was positively Identified as that of a 1S.year-old Ohio
girl who disappeared five years ago when she left her parents' camper
to take a shower.
. Her skeleton was among the remains of three people dug up in the
backyard of imprisoned sex offender Wiiiiam Mansfield Sr., 56, whose ·
two eldest sons are also jailed in another state on ch8rges of killing a
woman.
Authorities are continuing to dig up the junk-filled yard about 60
miles northwest of Tampa. They believe as many as six people may be
buried there.
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"JlWAtf
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"YOU GOT HERE/\ I.ITTLE LATE, MAt. MONSON. THIY'~~
Ai.f'~AOY HAI'l '1 n AF'1! OF THI MIPINQ ABOUT YOUI

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Weather
Clear tonight. Lows 4NO. Partly cloudy Tuesday. Hlgha in the mid70s. Cllllnce of rain 10 percent tonight and Tuesday. Winds westerly to
:fouthwes!A!rly leu than 10 mph tonight.

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"8UR! I'M IAN.Y1 M 1:40 GOT IN AT 8:!3...
15 MINUTIIIOOt.IR THAN USUAL!"

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Exteaded Oblo Foneaat- Wednesday through Friday: Showers ending Wednelday. Fair Thursday and a chance of showen again
Friday. Highlln lhe~llldlow601 . Lows inthe40a Wednesday and In
the mid-308 to the low 40a Thursday and Friday.

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Larry Sinunons, owner of Simmons-Oid8mobile-Cadillac Agency,
located on Pomeroy's West Main
Street, has purchased Pomeroy
Motor Co., from A. R. Knight.
The new bUlliness, the largest
agency in Pomeroy, will be known
as Sinunons-Old8mobile-CadillacChevrolet, Inc.
Sinunons, an Independent insurance agent; purchased the Oldsmobile-Cadillac agency from lr·
villll Karr, which operated under the
nan'le of Karr and Van Zandt; on
Nov. 5, 1979. Irving Karr had
operated Karr and Van Zandt 33
years.
Knight has been in the · car
·business since 1922 having started in
West Virginia. He began working for
Pomeroy Motor Company on ~an.

· Pomeroy Motor Company was
built in 1966. Knight designed the
building and oversaw the construction.
Over the years, Knight has employed as many as 50 persons. Sim·
mons wUl employ 25 people in his
new operation.

Salesmen for Sirnnlons will be
Marvin Keebaugh, Mike Anderson,
Steve Kiser and Pete Burrill.
John and Marilyn Fultz, Middleport, owners and operators of
Meigs Tire Center, East Main
Street, Pomeroy, are in the process
of purchasing the Simmons·

Oldsmobile-Cadillac building. Fultz
said no definite dste has been set Ill!
to wheh he will move hill operation
from its present location to the Simmons building.
· Simmons resides in Coolville with
hill wife, Linda and their seven-year
old son Michael.

20,1929.

Knight became part owner of
Pomeroy Motor in 1940 and in 1951
became the sole owner of the
business.
He purchased Mason County
Motors in 1941 and sold that
business, Oct. 20, 1979.
In 1943, Knight · purchased
GalUpolill Motor Company which he
will continue to operate.
George Harris will serve as
general manag_er for Simmons.
Harris began his career in the car
business in 1941 working for .Knight.
He served sever.al years in the armed forces and upon his return in
1946 he again went to work for
Knight.
Harris left Pomeroy Motor ahd
went to work for Karr and Van Zan·
dt. He served as manager after the
business was sold by Karr to Simmons. He will continue in that
position at the new location.

POMEROY MOTOR COMPANY SOLD -A. R.
Knight, seated, t1lrDB tbe keys to Pomeroy Motor Co.,
over to Larry Stmmoos, left, new owner of Pomeroy
Motor. The new btulness will be lUiowo lUI Simmo111-

Oldsmoblle-Cadlllac-Cbevrolet,luc. On lbe right Ia
George Hai'IU, wbo will serve u geaeral mauager 1..Simmoas. Tbe oew btulaess wtli be ID operation
Tueadsy. Simmoos will retain its present pboae DUJDber,ttz.fiU.

Hearings to begin on.possible gas tax hike
COLUMSUS, Ohio (AP) Hearings get under way In the
Senate Wednesday on a House
measure which could become the
vehicle for a state gasoline tax hike.
It is a proposal by Rep. Frederick
H. Deering, R-Monroeville, appropriating $689 million to run the
trallllportation department for the
fiscal year starting JUly I.
All approved by the House, the
austere document mostly just
provides for highway maintenance
and a transportation work force
barely large enough to run the highway system, Deering said.
Another bill in the Senate High:
ways and Transportation Committee calls for a hJke of 3-4 cents In

the seven-cents-a-gallon gasoline
tax.
Its sponsor, Sen. Paul E. Pfeifer,
R-Bucyrus, said it would raise froni
$150 millio~ million a year for
the state to do something about what
officials call crumbling highways
and shaky bridges.
Senate Ptesident Paul E. Gillmor,
R-Port Clinton, said the two
measures could be combined if there
is enough support in the upper chamber for the increase.
He said minority Democrats, as
well as Republicans who control the
Senate, would have to join in support
of the politically sensitive proposal.
Republicans in the House. attempted to attach a four-cents-a·

gallon hike to the bill when it passed
there, but were voted down after
majority Democrats said they wantedthe GOP Senate to act first.
Meanwhile, as an April 9 vote on
the state's regular budget bill approaches in the House, there is talk
that a major, permanent tax boost
may be in the works for !hill fall,
timed roughly to coincide with
school openings.
The possibility of timing a hike in
that fashion has been discussed by
Gov. James A. Rhodes and leaders
of both parties in the Legislature but
a decillion has not been made, they
said.
Neither has the governor said officially whether he will or ..__· _·,-·

urge the Legislature to keep intact
those temporary sales apd other tax
hikes he requested in December to
deal with a current budget deficit.
The Republican governor has indicated he will come up With a fiacal
plan for the next biennium around
May I, but sources in the Legislature
said they believe it may already be
pretty well finned up.
He is being urged by some Senate
Republicans to let the temporary .
taxes expire at the end of six months, as originally intended.
Senate President Pro Tern
Thomas A. Van Meter, R·Ashland,
for instance, said he thinks that to do
otherwise would be a breach of faith
wi~ the people.

Youth faces
theft charge
A 17-yesr old Columbus youth is
being held in Meigs County jail on
charges ol petty theft following an
incident at Duncan's Grocery, Darwin, Saturday at approximately 5:30
p.m. the Meigs County Sheriff's
Departme11t reports.
Accordlnt! to deputies, four people
made purchases at Duncan's
Grocery however, one of them
allegedly picked up some other
itemll, . put them in hill coat and
walked out of the store. Three of the
four persons had already left the
8\ore In a vehicle that was stopped
on U.S. 33 a short time later.
In other activity, a 1978 Ford
Bronco owned by Billy Harris, RD,
Racine, that was reproted stolen to
the Pomeroy Pollee Department
Sunday morning, was recovered at
noon Sunday by the sherlfrs department.
IContinued on page 10)

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p AR,TICIP ATES IN EVENT- Cadette Troop 1180
·Gf Mel&amp;s County participated In Expo '81 allbe aJ111Q81
llloGM Scout.-().Rama at tbe Natioaal Guard Armory

in PoiDl Pleauat. SboWII dem01111lrallq )'11'11 arl an
left to rtghl, Breada Wblte, Tammy Capellart lllld:

Carolyn Casto.

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The Daily sentinel-Page-a

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'lbe fWIS and pother about Am- reports, intelligence digests and
basoador Kirkpatrick's having spent bOOks which have as lbeir sole aim
a few minutes · in discussion with the fortification of America in a
Gen. P. W. Van der Westhuizen rein- (relatively) hostile world.
Inasmuch as everybody from Curforces the melancholy thesis that the
West is absolutely bound and deter- tis LeMay to Allen Ginsberg would
mined to commit suicide, not- agree that South Africa is as close as
. withstanding that America is any area this side of the Persian
'- Beautiful, and that God sheds His Gulf to being indispensable to U. S.
security and the control of vital shiplights on us.
Consider. General Van der ping lanes - and, incidenlally,
• Westhulzen is one of the heads of totally indispensable to the security
: South Africal military intelligence. of Japan - it hardly surprises that
lnlbe U.S., operating now for over a an organization concerned with
quarteN:entury, is an organization American security should be incalled the American Security Coun- terested in having meetings with a
cil. Many distinguished American head of military security in South
: . military and public-spirited men are Africa.
But enter the diplomatic co~
• asaoeiated with it, and it circulates

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l1l CourtSb'~t
Pomeroy, Ohio
liii-91Z·U5i
DEVOTED TO ntE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

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Publlaher

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

Assisi&amp;Dt PubUshet/CoatroUer

Gent'ral MlnaJtr

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

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By WW Grimaley
AP Correspoadeot

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A S•.African general will get .yotui_ _ _ _ __:_Wi~ill=ia_m_F........

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Today'll

Pag- 2- The DallY Sentlnt._
Pomeroy-Middleport, Olllo
.Monday, Mucll30, 191J ,. ___

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A MEMBER of T'lw As!locl..kd Pren. l11laod Oail)' Pres• A11sociadon aDd ll1e
Amerltan Nt&gt;~Upapt'f ~blishfn Allot'iatiun.

LETfERS OF OPINION are "'l'loomt!'d. Thty thnuld bt- ku Lbln JOt words long. All
ll'ttl'rtri are ~tllbjwt w rdltlng aid must bt- slg•t'd •lth ru.nw. 1ddrnli •nd klt&gt;pbunt&gt;
numbtr. Ntturudgntd lt&gt;ltt'n: • -Ill bt' publh1ht"d . I~Ut'n 11 huuld bt' In t~udd \asle-. .cldrt&gt;Sslnt~
iHIIllt'ti , nul pt'MU1Rallllt•1L

Letters to editor
· A big thank you _ _ _ _ _ __
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realize,

: As most of you should
February was National Children's
Dental Health Month. We would like
to thank the people involved for their
cooperatiOn in bringing the message
across and' making the programs
suec:eSsful.
Mayors Hoffman ·and Andrews of
Middleport and Pomeroy for
proclaiming February as Dental
Health Month. The principals,
teachers and students at Harrisonville, Middleport, Pomeroy, Riverview, Rutland, Salisbury, Salem
Center imd Tuppers Plains Elementary Schools for allowing us to make
presentations on dental health in
their classrooms.

plication. The United States, which
practiced apartheid until approximatelY 15 years ago, is antlapartheid with the entbusiasm of lbe
newly converted. Perhaps there is a
little . cynicism - though a better
··word for it would be condescension
- here, because it isn't consistenUy
race prejudice that we are stalwali
in oppoeing, but prejudice by whites
against blacks.
In Rhodesia we found Intolerable a
situation we would not even have
taken official notice of if Mr. Ian
Smith had been the bead of a btack
Kokose tribe, exercising total
dOminion over the rest of the country; nor was the world up in anns
against the discrimination by ldi
Amin against Indians in Uganda, or
the internecine quarrels in Nigeria
when it was considered patriotic for
the majority to practice genocide
against lbe Ibo tribe when it souglt
separation in lbe state of Biafra.
In any event, with respect to South
Africa, several years ago we locked
ourselves into a nwnber of positions
that, when you get down to it, are incompatible . with maintaining
diplomatic relations with South
Africa and courting its strategic
cooperation. That policy expresses
itself thrOugh an informal ban against inviting to this country the chief of
state and a lonna! ban against admitting to the United States any
military men of South African
origin. But this particular general,
perhaps because his training is, af.
ter all, in intelligence, put on a red
wig or whatever and passed unnotlces through U. S. Immigration,
merely as a South African accepting
an invitation from the American
Security Council.
It then happened that there was a
chance meeting between the general
· and our new ambassador to the
United Nations, Mrs. James Kirk·

We would also like to thank The
Daily Sentinel for its support in running the articles on dental topics
during February and WMPO for its
continuing series of radio spots on
dental health.
Dental disease can be prevented
and starting young with good habits
is the key. That is the point of the annual observance of Children's Dental Health Month. Let's try to carry
the theme throughout the year,
because your dental health is a very
important part of overall health. Janet Connolly, Kathy Fry, Rhonda
Hannai\!J, Staff and R. Craig
Mathews.

Proud they senred.;.,.·.~----I'm writing this letter about the son was in Korean for 18 months;
people telling the young boys not to our third wasn't out of the states, but
register. I think this is wrong. I don't he served two years ; our fourth ser·
think they sbould have stopped the ved three years and 18 montM in
draft iil the first place. Also, I think Korea. Our fifth son enlisted but
Mr. Carter did wrong .when he let all didn't pass. Our sixth son enlisted in
those boys come back to this country the Navy and was on a mine sweeper
nearly three years. Our daughter's
and not punish them.
What would our country have done husband retired from the service af.
if the boys had done that during · ter more than 20 years. Our first
grandchild died in the service and he
World War II?
If we should have another war had two brothers in the service. We
maybe we could have an army. to have seven! grandsons that would
fight. Don't g~t me wrong, I don't have to go if our country would get
want war any more than anyone into war. I'm proud our sons served
else. Maybe you think I don't have in the service of our wbnderful counany cblldren, but my husband and I try. The people that tell the boys not
have seven children - sill sons and to register sbould go to another
country to live. I love my country.one daughter.
Five of our sons served in the ser- Mabel Pickens, 27 Country Lane,
vice of our wonderful country. Our Shade, Oh., 992-7203.
oldest son, in W. W. II; our second
App~reseffort

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We would like to take this opportunity to thank lbe officials and
the Fire Department of the Village
of Middleport for hosing and
cleaning the streets in lbe bWliness
district.

You did a conunendable job and
voluntary efforts are especially aP"
preciated in these inflationary
times.- 'lbe Middleport chamber of
Commerce, Candy Ingels,
President.

Today in history. ..
Today is Monday, Mareh30, the 89th day of 1981. 'lbere are 276 days left in
the year.
Today'a highlight In history:
On March 30, 18117, Rusala agreed to sell Alaska to the United States for

fl.2million.
On this date:
In 1870, Tex.u waa readmitted to the Union after lbe Clvii'War.
In 1917, the Ruaslan provlalOIIII government guaranteed the independence
ofPoland. '
In 19t0, J1p111 eatab1llhed a puppet govenunent In occupied China
In 19'14, a ~ jetliner arrived In New York in what was described u
the first clvUlan flight from lbe ~ mainland to the United States.
Ten yean ago: The 24th Congress oflbe Soviet Corrununist Party opened
lnMCIICOW.
Five years ago: A general strike by Arab citizens in northern Israel erup.
ted Into violent claahes.

patrick. ''lbe S&amp;lte Department
didn't 1mOw about that meeting, and
so denied, when asked about it, thlt
it took place. Always lnailltiOUS,
IIIey should have asked Mrs. Kirk·
patrick about it. Now those who
know the ladY, hoWever slightly, are
disinclined to believe that at that
socii! meeting she addreeaed the
general by Uldng, 'Row many
niggen did YO!Ildll today?" But, to
]udge from tbe reaction to the
meeting bu such as B. Akporode
Clark, head of the Nigerian Mlsslon
here, that only could bave bene lbe
subltance of their conversation.
In recent months and years we
have had, visiting this country, top
generals, to say nothing of the chiefs

of state, of ~ libel'tlrlln havena
as the Union of Soviet Social
Republica and lbe People's Republic
of China. They did not ~ on such
occuiOIIII, with our ambassador to
the , UN In coincidental clr·
cumatJmce; they mixed, often as
not with the prealdent oflbe United
Staies, including at state dinners.

prollllllicmllam that I make tbe
followtnc 111111!..Uon to~ Van
der Weetbullan. It Ia that out time
lie WIIDII to come to lbe United
Stltlll to talk •bout llll&amp;ten of c:cmJliOII a&amp;nteglc CCIIICenl, hellbould
on a black face,llld tell them It
migratkm that he Ia Prealdent Sekou .
Toure of Guinea- Pr,ealdent TOure Ia

At lbe United Nations, these practltioners ol jUBtice would regularly
get a standing ovation, even as the
predeceMOr of Ambassador Ak·
porode Clark, militarY dictator
General Gowon, received a standing
ovation, in my presence, in 19'13.
! was a spy for the CIA for a few
't ·
months back in 1951, and 1 l.S
lberefore with a certain pride in my

Guinelllll, since the rumor Ia that he
kiUII off people •t aometlling •llibt!Y
exceedlnl! lbe birth r.te. Lut time
.___ g1
tbe ..__ t
he was here he,..., ven
...,. o
the city by lbe Jlllyor of W~
and I doubt that any meetinl between him and Ambuudor ADdrew'
YOWII! would have been COinCl'dental:AndyYoungistoopollte.

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Bobby did Saturday night to a Louisiana
Knight's akinnish with a heckler State fan with whom he got into a
over lbe weekend pointed up the shoving-cussin' match. It happened
sharp personality contrast of the in the lounge of a suburban Cherry
rtval' coaches in tonight's big game Hill, N.J., motel after Knight's
for the college basketball cham- · Hoosiers had crushed the Bayou
pionsblp.
Tigers in the NCAA semifinals.
It's the good guy-bad guy theme
"We didn't trade shoves," Knight
right out of those dime pulp said later of the incident. " I did the
magazines of the 19.'11); - plots shoving. We didn't trade insults polished Up by an imaginative he did the insulting."
Hollywood and and fed us in movies
Thus the NCAA Championship
andonthescreen.
·
Final in Phltadelphia's Spectrwn,
It's Alan Ladd's Shane going eye- one of sport's premier ·spectacles;
tG-eye with black-suited Jack Palan- . focuses the spotlight on the two
ce (a North Carolinian, ironically) brain trusts on the sidelines, suborall over again.
dinating the activities of the young
So you "picks your man and takes ll:len on the floor.
your choice."
Smith, now 50, a disciple of the imThere's Knight, coach of ttie In- mortal Phog Allen at Kansas, has a
diana Hoosiers, whose molecular record of 19 winning seasons in the
makeup is a little bit of Billy Martin, · 20 he has been at N.C., 429 victories
a sprinkling of General Patton and a . and 142 defeats, not counting the
lot of the late Vince Lombardi and playoffs. He has made nwnerous inWoody Hayes.
novations - 'his "four corners"
Down the floor apiece there's defense the most notable - coached
fatherly, mild-mannered Dean an Olympic gold medal team and
Smith, who will be directing the sent scores of his pupils into pro ball,
maneuvers of the North Carolina many becoming stars.
·
Tar Heels.
This is his sixth time in the
" People always say, 'Nobody can NCAA 's Final Four, exceeded only
be that gOOd,'" says UCLA's Coach by Wooden's 11 times and 10 vicLarry Brown, a former Smith un- tories. The late Rupp made the
derstudy. "They dismiss him as finals six times, winning four. This iB
some kind of goody two shoes. But No.3 for Knight, whose Hoosiers won
that's the way he is ...a good, caring in 1976.
person."
Knight, 40, a sub on the great Ohio
Nobody says that about Knight, State teams of the early 1960s which
the curly-haired ten-or who kicks included Jerry ·Lucas and John
chairs, grabs players by the nape of Havlicek, has established a
the neck and occasionally shoves a remarkable record of 228 victories
tormentor against the wall + as he and 68 defeats.

1:

one of a dlmlnllblnl namber of

jl

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The Hawaiian economy Is
reasonably healthy, but storm
clouda are looming on lbe horizon.
Tourism, the state's No. 1 industry,
iB depreslled and will mOlt likely
remain so unW the mainland
economy imprOved slgnlflcanUy. In
several recent ~eys, large number of voters aald that the state
would be prudent to Invest·Its excess
funds In anticipation of harder times
ahead.
In addition, the spending ceiling
has prevented state offlclala from

NCAA final has pure gold

we're a far better team today."
The records may be tarnished PHILADELPHIA (AP ) - Defen"We're both different clubs since
se, rebounding, patience on offense · nint.lrranked Indiana is 2&gt;9 and sixthe
first game," agreed Smith, who
and above all teamwork- that's the t.lrrated North Carolina is 2!).7 - but
is
in
the Final Four for the sixth time
gospel according to Bobby Kniglt everything else about the title game
but
has never won the cham·
and Dean Smith and that's the kind is pure gold.
pionship.
"They are a much better
of basketball ·to be played tonight
team.
For
Both
schools
have
great
basketone thing, they've settled
when Indiana takes on North
on
one
lineup,
which they didn't have
ball
traditions.
Both
coaches,
Knight
.
Carolina for the NCAA chamthen.
And
we've
made progress sinof
Indiana
and
Smith
of
North
pionship.
Carolina, are among the ce then, too.
Although Knight was the focus of acknowledged leaders of their r---------------l
profession. Both teams have
controversy following a run-in with a
brilliant individual athletes, but both
Louisiana State fan at a hotel SaturRepresenting
5TATE
utilize
them within the team concept
day night, that sideshow didn't
AUTOMOBILE
MUTUAL
diminish the appeal of tonight's glit- - just the way the basketball purist
INSURANCE
would
want
it.
tering final.
COMPANY
And both are playing at the top of
their games, to the point where both
Please Tell · m• "'""---~­
• ......,.,.,.
coaches say you can ignore the
SERIES ONE ...1-s PolicY•
result of their most recent meeting,
a ~ North Carolina triwnph in
NAM
December.
"'Ao"'oo"'E"'s""" - - - - - - - "That game is so long ago, you're
probably
talking
about
two
different
BY GEORGE STRODE
PHONE
teams," said Knight. "In each case,
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Rapidshooting Dayton Roth, led by Ike r-------------+-------------1-----------Thornton 's 19 points, whipped
unheralded Wadsworth 7~ for the
state Class AAA high school boys
basketball crown Saturday night.
The Falcon's, ranked fifth
statewide during the regular season,
posted their 26th victory in 'll games
this season for their second Ohio
championship in the last sill seasons.
Roth won the Class AA title in 1976.
The state championship placed
Roth Coach Mike Haley in a class by
himself. Haley is the only Individual
in the 59 years of the schoolboy
classic to play on a championship
team and coach two more title winners.
Haley played on Portsmouth's
1961 champion team and has guided
both of Roth's title-winning squads.
The Falcon's however. had to
choke off a last-minute rally to
protect their lead. Roth, which led
by as many as 17 points early in the
third quarter, saw its lead dwindle to
7~ with 22 seconds left.

---..

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I
I
I
I

--- ----·

trade, once a relatively minor factor in the U. S. economy as I wbole, II
playtng an increasing and increadingly profitabl~ role. Purcbasee and Sliee
abroad now account for approximately a quarter of the ~ 111ti0111i
product, twice the comparable proportion in 19'10 and almOit three ~
that of1950.
Of further interest is lbe nature of the merchandlae being traded. We
know all too well how hugely oil and Japanese autoe contribute to the U. S.
~rt bill. We also hear plenty about the importance of wheat and other
agricultural products to exports, suggesting that in world trade the United
States iB becOming an industrial second-rater, primarily a !lllW'Ce of natural
resources for more efficient economies.
Less publicized are manufactured exports, Since 19'13, •ccordinC to
Commerce Department statistics, these are up 235 percent, a1moet double
lbe growth rate (131 percent) of agricultural exports.
Far from taking a beating In world trade, lbe United States II an Increasingly active and succeeaful participant.
AU this is of more than academic interest at a time when protectionist
pressures are also on the rille. Mention the auto and steel induatries and
you've already spoken volumes about lbe domestic situation.
But protectlonlat sentiment ltaelf is eminently exportable. 'lbe reluctance of the Japanese to open their home market is notorious, and there II
selective resistance in Europe to American products that could be
heightened by American aet101111.
•
Self-indulgence in self-pi'Otectlon at the cost of eiiCOIII'aging protectionism In world trade in which we are not doing badly at au obviously would
not be in our long-term interests.
In our preoccupation with the problem areas to the vtrtua1 exclllllion of
lbe bigger picture, we are behaving liile the baker's super-picky customers.
We're concentrating on the hole and Ignoring 1be doul(hnut.
·

Aloha; tax revolt ?.____ _ _ _ _R_ob_en J. Wagman
problem results from the fact that
Hawail Is one of lbe few governmental bodies operating at a surplus
- at least for oow.
'lbe state's $179 million surplWl is
the product of a combination of factors, among than the spending
ceiling, lbe higher tax revenues that
have resulted from inflation and an
increase In federal money for lbe
state.

fereace. Tbe two teams wW battle Monday for the
cbamploosblp of the NCAA. (AP Laserpboto). (See AP
SportsWlrestory). ·

=~------~1

Trade and the doughnut _ _ _ __

WASHINGTON (NEA) - Tax·
revolt fever swept the nation several
years ago aa voters in state after
state lobbied for tax and spending
cuts in the wak of California's
Proposition 13.
But voters in Hawaii are having
second thoughts about the tax-revolt
amendment that they readily added
to their state's COIIIItltutlon two
years aco. They are learning that
good ideas locked into law as constitutional amendments can have
some unexpected results and that
what ts easily done iB not always so
easily undone.
'lbe Hawaiian problem iB in many
respects unique. It Is not lbe uaual
lack of funds. Quite lbe contrary.
'lbe state has IW]II111 money that
must be returned tu a public that Is
not au that eager to receive it.
The amendment lmpoaed a ceiling
on state spending and n!quired that
surplua funds be returned to the taxpayers every two years. 'lbe current

FINAL COACHES - IDdiaDa coach Bobby
Kolgbl, left, and Uaivers1ty of North CaroliDa coach
Deaa Smith reach to questions at a Suaday press coa-

l)o ou own or operate •
small or medium-size
retail store. office, apan·
ment .&gt;r church?
Then- you may qualify
for S.tate Auto Mutual's
SERlE$ ONE' Buslneas
P.ollcy ... · a modern-is~
tomorrow package plan
thet A:OIJ)bil'les an array of
broad property and llablll·
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safeguard vour opera·,
tlons. All for a·:lfii'.V attrac·
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Let us explain th&amp;
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SERIES ONE' ... the Short
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could prove Interesting
ana rewarding fo you.
' J.ust give us a call or
mall tile handy coupon.
. DALE C. WARNER
INSURANCE
· 102 w. Main 992·2143 PomeroY. o.

Dayton Roth
AAA champ

••

There's more to being on a government mailing list than a mailbox overflowing with material you don't have time to read on subjects of minimal interest.
'
Occasionally an item in the inflow can be unexpectedly enlightening,
such as the current Special Report No. 74 iasued by the U. S. State Department's Bureau of Public Affairs.
Tersely tiUed "Trade Patterns of the West, 1979," this document lays out
the exchanges of goods and services of the United States and Z3 of its principal economic a.ssociates with each other and the rest of the world in 14
pages cit mind-nwnbing tables and charts. Fortunately, an introductory
summary in perfectly comprehensible Engtlsh comes to the rescue with an
overview making some interesting points.
One is lbe increasing importance of trade to the American economy. a.nd
in particular of trade with Western Europe. We are on the receiving end of a
flood of goods from the Europeans, right?
Right. The statistics prove it. But they also show that the Europeans are
better customers of the United States than we are of them.
In the year under studY, 29.5 percent of aU American OJports went to
Western Europe but only 5.9 percent of Europe's exports reached the United
States. In dollar tenns- the only ones, after all, that are blinkable- U.S.
sales to Europe totaled ~.6 billion. Purchases from Europe came to $42
billion, aU. S. trade surplus of $11:6 billion.
That was, of course, more than offset by deficits in two ether key
markets- OPEC, from whose oil producers we bought tn billion more than
we sold, and Japan, where -lbe imbalance was $9 billion in Japan's favor.
These were the most massive contributions to lbe American global trade
deficitof$25.3 billion for the year.
That is certainly bad news, of a type to which we have unfortunately
grown too accUlltomed to. But It disguises somewbat better word.
'lbe State Department study is in line with the trend in which foreign

Insurance Package
For You

making needed • capital ·lm·
provements in lbe state's schooLs,
roads and bridces- Another large
percentage of voters finds It counterproductive to give back money
that nobody really nu-s and then
to ask voters to approve bond issues
for wha! most agree are vital ex·
pendltures.
Although the polla show that few
taxpayers want the money back that IIIey would prefer that It be
saved for a rainy day or spent on
capital Improvements - the state's
leglliators are trying to com up with
some equitable way to distribute the
surpl111. They are finding that It Is
more difficult to refund taxes than to
collect them.
The refund plans being eonaiderecl
range from tax credits to a on&amp;-tlme
cut In state lncome-tu ratea, from
caah refunds to a moratorlwn m the
collection of certain tue1 unw the
surplus II ellmlnated. AU of thele

HURTING- NBC World Welterweight tide challeager Larry Bollds
Is worlled on by handlers ID bls.coroer bel ore the start of the lOth roll.lld of
Saturday Dight's fight wtth Sugar Ray Leonard at the Carrier Dome In

Syracuse, N. Y. Leonard retained hlo
Laserpbolo l.

IJfOIJCUI.s

seem to be drawing •
uniform lack of enthualasm.
U lbe refund n~qulrement were
merely a statute, the leglliature
could pass a new statute to resolve
the problem. Because the
requirement Ia locked Into the
state's COIIIItitution, however, a constitutional amendment is n~qllired to
change lt. Enacting such an amendment would take several years of d·
fort.

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) · - Cincinnati
left·hander Joe Price, upset with
himself after Sunday's H loss to the
Detroit Tigers, felt that he had let
himself be intimidated by the
' Tigers.
"I had a couple of chances to
knock somebody down and didn't do
it,'' Price said. " They were hanging
out over the plate."
With little more than a week of
spring training left and Cincinnati's
pitching staff still incomplete, Prire
must convince the Reds to keep him
on their major league roster .
" It's time for me to get my rear in
' gear,'.' Price said. "I baven't been as
mentally tough as I ought to be, and
I hope this is the turning point. I
" ,hope you will see a little more deter• ' mined Joe Price next time ."
- Price wasn't the only Cincinnati
pitcher with problems Sunday. The
Tigers freely hit starter Tom
Seaver, who said he has a lot of
ground to cover before the April 8
season opener with the Philadelphia
Phillles.
"1 made a lot of bad pitches,"
Seaver said. ''I've got work to do,
and 1 am trying to find the beat way
to do lt. I feel fine, physically, but I
was not happy with my mechanics.''
Seaver, charged with his second
loss of the spring, set to work when

Meanwhile, leaders of the
Hawaiian tax revolt are pl•led.
'lbey say that the m.tence of the
surpl111 proves that IIIey were rtgbt.
They are dellghled that spenclinc
has been cut and that tupayen lillY
be getting aometbing back.
But the poUa show that a
slgnlf~t majority of taxpayers
are no longer aure that the amendment Is In their lq-term good. Tbla
II an lntel'l!lllng development In lbe
continuing bltue over tuel.

At! DISI/II0/6, ...DOON
_ _ESBURY_
.- !»&gt;8HH//,JIS/'
QOIR f/6T

Jl/ST~

A PEC/5101.
I

~O)tf.

I

· One year ago: Security forcea were on full alert as thouaancls of people In
El Sllvador paid their last respects to Archbishop Qacar Arn!Mfo Romero,
who'd bien ••saasllllted several days urlier.
·
Today'I blrtbdaJ: Former CIA r.t;-·JCtor Richard Heimlls 68.
,
'l'lloulbt for today: 'lbe worst vice of a faaatic Is bls sincerity - Ollcar
Wilde, Jrllb.bom writer (1864-1900). .

;

with a lOth round TKO. (AP

· Performances upset
. Reds' Seaver, Price

I THINK I

tlU~

'

he left the game, throwing about 15
pitches In the bullpen.
· For Detroit, rookie · pitchers
Howard Bailey and Jerry Ujdur
scattered nine hannless hits, whic~
delighted Manager Sparky ·An·
derson.
"I asked Davey Concepcion, and
he told me Bailey's ball is really
moving, which I already thought,''
said Anderson. the former Reds
mana~er .

Jeff Davis hit a jwnp shot to slice
Wadsworth's deficit to the lowest
since the opening moments of the
game.
However, Roth's starting guards
Chuck Taylor and William Colston
sank three free throws in the last 19
seconds to insure the championship.
A crowd of 13,919 watched the
game in St. Johns Arena, accounting
for a record tournament total of
124,206 for nine sessions. The old
record was 123,079set in 1980.
Both finalists were well-balanced.
Besides Thornton, Colston scor!'d 16
polnls, Darryl Murphy had 13 and
Fred Johnson 10 for Roth.
Wadsworth also had three doublefigure scorers, led by Ken Niehbuhr
with 19 points. Phil Vukovich had 16
and Bill Oehlenschlager 12.
Despite the defeat, Wadsworth's
backers showed their appreciation
with a long-standing ovation for the
Grizzlies, who did not even win their
own league during the regular
season.
At one point this year, Wadsworth
was ~ . The Medina County school
wound up with a 22-6 recrod.

Rpth will return to AA next year
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API There's good news and bad for Ohio
basketball teams in 1982, depending
upon which class you play in at state
tournament time.
Dayton Roth, which completed its
racehorse pace to the Class AAA
state championship w1th a 7~ victory over Wadswurth Saturday, is
returning to Class AA.
" It was a great win for us," said
Roth Coach Mike Haley, " but next
year we'll he back.in Class AA where
we really belong. We had 384 boys in
school this year and that placed us
one over the limit for Class AA . That
made It even more sweet in winning
the large school title.
"Many people don't give the Class

••

AA teams the Cl edit they really
deserve."
Haley also coached Roth to a Class
AA crown In 1976, his first year as a
head coach. "I think this may be better than the '76 win because I got
somewhat spoiled winning it in my
first year.
"Some coaches never win a title
and I thought I really didn't have
that much too look forward to."
Dave Sladky, Wadsworth coach,
said he was happy his team did as
well this season. "We rushed things
tonight, especially in the second
quarter and dug ourselves a real
hole. We were In danger of getting
blown out. Rut give our kids credit,
they really hung tough.

Lick the postale
increase with
by-Phone/
DIAMOND SAVINGS
AND LOAN COIVPANV
People Counr.•• the Diamond Difference!

216 W. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OHIO
992:.&amp;1&amp;55
Mon.-Wed. 9-4
Thur. &amp; Sat. 9-Noon
Fri. 9·6

�Montaav. March 30. INI

,;,P.;;a;,ig:,;;e_4;....;.T,;,;h;;.e.;;Do;;a;.;i;,~i~:..;.S;;e:.;n;.;t;.;in;.;e:.;I_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.!:P.!:o~m:_:;e;:r.::o:.!v.:;. Middle;&gt;ort, Ohio

Katie's Korner
ByKA'l'IECROW

'•

Seatblel writer
~~ Grove Grange 2049 is in
nee!of a ptano.
Last October
fire destroyed the
grange hall and
its contents and .
members ·are
presently in the
process
of
rebuilding.
One of the items
needed most is a
KATIE
piano. If you have one you would like
to dOIII!te to the cause you are asked
to contact Bob Reed, master, at 992·
1'lll/.

Goldie Reed stated that such a
donation would be greatly appreciated.
Congratulations are certainly in
order for the Meigs Chapter of the
American Cancer Society of which
Joan Anderson is president.
The Meigs Chapter ranks third in
the State of Ohio in donations.
This is definitely an ac·
complishment for little old Meigs
County. And just think, they have
yet to hold their door to door can·

vass.
Keep up th.e fine work.

Tuba/litigation, vasectomy
are not easily reversible

kindergarten teacher, and the
mothers of the kindergarten students are working on the largest money
making project they have ever undertaken.
They are planning a "flea
market" to be held on the
playground behind Pearl Street
Elementary on Satui-d.ay, April 4,
beginning at 10 a.m.
They will be selling space to any
individual or organization that
wishes to sell their items for $5 a
space. If the space is cleaned
following the event a $2 refund will
be made.
Advance . reservations . may be
made by calling mary at 992-3387.
However, persons may sign· up for
space the morning of the event.
Mothers of the kindergarten
students will be selling re(reshments
such as hot dogs, beverages, baked
goods and Easter candy to name a
few. Proceeds from the event, as far
as they will go, will be used to pay
the cost of kindergarten graduation,
field trips, and supplies for the two
classes.
Sounds like a fine idea.
Congratulations to Carol'. Burnette, I glory in your spunk.
Do have a nice week.

Vaug an's

Helen Help Us

BUSY PLACE- The workshop at the Senior Citizens Ceote.r is a busy
place. Senior volunteers do furniture refinishing, chair caning, and make
sinaU wooden items. Proceeds from their work and the sale of iteiDB go fD..
to the Senior Citizens Center program. Alex May Is pictured here wortlug
oo a roll top desk which he is refinishing.

Down Middleport way Mary Rose.

OPEN 7 DAYS
8 AM TIL 10 PM
CORNER OF LOCUST
&amp;PEARL ST•.
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

••

you're sure you want no more
BY HELEN B01TEL
children (or no children at all). - l l
Special cornspolldeDI
DEAR HELEN:
DEAR HELEN:
In mentioning tubal ligation as a
My husband and I have a ~
form of birth control, you may have bedrOOm house. Wben my Biller IIJid · •
given the impression that it is ~y
brother-in-olaw proposed movlnc ln
reversed, with a high probability of to
share expenses, we tbought it
subsequent conception. (Note From
would work out, but we dllcOvered
Helen: I hope I didn't give that im- almoSt instant incompatibility.
pression because I know better! ).
To avoid a confrontation, we InTo set the record straight, please
vited my husband's children to come
let me quote from a recent edition of
· live with us for a year. I told my
Population Reports, Series C, Nwnsister their visit was "unavoidable"
ber8:
and there's be no more room for
" At present, the odds of reversing
them. She didn't buy my lie.
female sterilization are not good.
Out of the frying pan!
Using the delicate technique of
The kids are worse than the fD..
micro-surgery, a handful of expert
surgeons have achieved pregnancy laws! What's more, my slater IIJid
her man won't speak to us. What can
rates after sterilization, of about 60
percent- double the rate of 20 years we do? - UP A CREEK
ago- but surgeons who are not suc- DEARUAC:
Lie in the bed of your own making,
cessful rarely report any results.
and
next time, don't lie! - l l
"Even the experts operate only on
good candidates for reversal women who have been carefully DEAR HELEN:
Today at the grocery's, I watched
screened on the basis of age, fer·
tility, health, and the condition of a small child take a few craclte~
from a small box, then replace It on
their Fallopian tubes.
"Probably only about on~fifth of the shelf. Her mother saw,lllld said
ali women sterilized by current nothing. She's teaching him to steal!
When our daughter was young and
techniques could have the
tasted
merchandise, I always
sterilization reversed. It is a long,
bought
it.
She had a bad habit of
difficult, and costly operation.
taking
things
that didn't belong to
Moreover, rates of ectopic (tubal)
her.
but
I
was
always
thankful folka
pregnancy after the procedures are
told
me.
Over
the
years,
we repair a
about 10 times higher than nonnal.
Jot
of
money
and
she
never
got in
"Given the barriers to successful
trouble.
Now
that
she's
away
from
reversal, women considering
home,
I
hope
the
habit
iB
·broken.
sterilization should be clearly in·
formed that it is usually a per· Isn't this better than allowing your
manent method 0! fertility control." children to sample (actually stealJ
and not put back? - H. M.
- M.B.B., Ph. D. CAND.
DEAR H.:
DEAR READERS:
Hardly!
May I add that vasectomy, too, is
By keeping your daughter. out of
not easily reversed. Mic!'&lt;)-surgery
trouble
with repayments for her
has been successful in some
thefts,
you
allowed stealing as
procedures, but, as with women, the
s,urely
as
did
the mother you conoperation is more often a failure
demn
.
than a success.
Cover-ups don't cure dishonesly,
Again, I emphasize: consider
as
you discovered over the yea~ I surgical sterilizaiton only when

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·MONARC

4, f98J

H.

RSVP PROJECT- (iiadys Dillon, left, and Bea May of the Retired
Senior Volunteer Program work oo bedpads which are provided free of
charge to homebound patients.

RSVP donates bedpads
Over 100 disposable bedpads to be
used for incontinent patients have

.

Michael McFarlane

Romberg Remembered
concert set April 5th
" Romberg Remembered," a
program of song and story depicting
the life and tinnes of the composer,
Sigmund Romberg , will be the
closing colleert of this season for the
Tri·County Community Concert
Association on Sunday afternoon,
April 5, at 3 p.m. in the Gallia
Academy High School Auditorium.
Sigmund Romberg's music has
brought joy to millions of people.
Next Sunday's concert will portray
the man that composed these sym·
pathetic and emotionally appealing
songs with a script of his life and
times, tastefully staged, with
Michael McFarlane taking the role
of the great man himself.
The newest melody selected for
this program is over 35 years old.
"Romberg Remembered" is presen·
ted in two acts with singing and is
completely scripted and
choreographed.
McFarlane, a baritone from
Idaho, has performed in almost
every area of the field of vocal
music. After obtaining his un·

dergraduate degree from Oberlin
Conservatory of Music and his
masters from Chicago Musical
College, he embarked on an opera
and operetta career in Switzerland
and Austria. A list of his convert per·
forrnances is most lengthy as are his
numerous credits in operetta and
musical theatre. He both wrote and
produced the current production of
" Rom bert Remembered."
Joining McFarlane in the production are [)oreen Joachim, soprano;
Richard Margison, tenor and
William Shookhoff, pianist.
As Sunday's concert closes this
season, the Tri County Community
Concert Association will open its
34th annual membership campaign
for the 1981-32 season on the
following day, Monday , April 6.
Three concerts will be included in
the upcoming season, including to
Mrs. C. R. McGinness, association
president. Chairing this upcoming
membership chairman campaign
will be Anita Tope, April o through
April II .

Changing roles of women
highlight AA UW meeting
A program on the changing rates hard to compete with the end result
of women highlighted the Tuesday being more valuable. The barrier of
night meeting of the Middleport· discrimination is breaking down, it
Pomeroy Area Branch of the was decided.
American Association of University
The girls were encouraged to pur·
Women held at the Meigs Inn.
sue a non-traditional interest if they
Eastern, Southern and Meigs High have the desire, ambition, deter·
School were represented by 20 girls mination and fortitude. It was noted
for the panel-Wscussion program. that tnany women now receive the
Barbara Knight, attorney-at-law; same money as men and it is not
served as moderator for the panel always the college degree people
consisting of Dr. Margie Lawson, a who receive the most salary and
dentist; Tuni Redovian, an prestige. A question-answer session
estimator for an electric compgny; provided information concerning the
Mindy Hill, a heavy equipment girls' interests.
operator; and Celia McCoy, a nonThe .Program was planned by the
traditional teacher. .
Each expressed her views as a corrunittee of Mrs. Knight, represen·
woman working in a traditionally ling women; Dorothy Oliver, the
male career. Each told of her educational area; and Rachael
training and background and her Downie, the area of community in·
reason for choosing the particular terest.
A silent auction was conducted by
type of work. as well as the pros and
cons of the work and the satisfactory Jeanne Bowen and Maxine Philson
for the purpose of educational loan
results.
It was pointed out that in • fund sponsored by the Ohio State
training program of mostly men, a Division of the American
feW women probably work twice as Association of University Women.
I,

been made by members of the
Retired Senior Volunteer Program .
they are constructed of several
layers of newspapers stitched to
clean used bed sheeting and while
they are not waterproof, they are
reported to be helpful in maintaining
a clean bed or wheelchair.
According to Mrs. Eleanor
Thomas, director of the local Senior
Citizens Center, the pads are free of
charge to any individual caring for
patients in their home without reim·

School of religion
begins on Wednesday

bursemenl. They can be obtained at
the Center or at the American Cancer Society office.
Several dozen of the bedpads had
been shared with the Home Health
S&lt;:rvices to use in their community
service program, and Mrs. Edna

Mrs. Marcella Casto, Chester, had
her sons, Joshua and Jeremy,
dedicated to the Lord at the
Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness Church
in a service by the Rev. Dewey King .
Jeremy was held by his godmother,
Patricia King. Standing with their
grandsons were Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Hartman of Chester. Jeremy and
Joshua are also the sons of Donald
Casto, Cheshire.

The Uuily Sentinel
(USpS I...... )
A [ij~llloll of MD.ltimedla, liiC.

Published every afternoon except Sundly,
Monday through Friday, Ill Court SliM~ by
lht Ohio VaUe)' Publi&amp;hinC Company Mult.lmtdia, Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio ~7111,
992-2158. Second clasl postage paid at
Pomtroy, Ohio.

Member: The A.nociated ?tess, Inland Dally Prtaa A.uodation and the American
N e - Publlabers AtO!Odatlon, No~ ON!
Adnrtlain~e Representative, Landing
Msoc:ialu, 3101 Euclid Ave., Cleveland,
Otllo,4 ~115 .

POOTMASTER: Send addtess to 1lle Dally ·
Senllnel. lll Court Sl., Pomeroy, 0111~ 1$1119.
SUIISCRIP'I'ION RATES
By Carrier or MIMI' Roa&amp;e
Oocwetk ,., .............. , ........ • 1.00
Olle Month ......................... 14.111
One Year , .............. ....... ... $62.80
SINGLE COPY
PRICES
Dilly ....... , , ... .............. IS Cents
SutaTibrn not de:airinl to pay the carrier
moy nm1l In odvonce direct to 1lle Dally

Senlintl oo a 3, 6 or 12 moo\h buts. Credit
will be civen carrier each monttl.
No sublcripti001 by maU permitted in towns
where heme carrier HtY\ct llavaU.blc.

MAILSUBIICII1PTION8
ObitaldWI!ItYlr'JIII'3 Mooth .. .'. .. .. .. .............. llo.IO
Six month ... : ..... . . ........ ..... •11 .:110
1 Year . . . . . . ............... .. .. $33.00
Ra1t1 Olllide OIIJo
· aDdWettVIqbdl
3M&lt;xltb , ........................ 111.111
8 Moolll . .. .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. . .. . 110.111
1 Year ........... , ........ ·.· .·· . ..Gill

LIN TIN

Staff Sgt. William D. ClarT, son of
Evelyn Clark of 106 Pleasant Ridge,
Pomeroy, and C. E. Clark, also rl.
Pomeroy, has participated in Global
Shield 81, the Strategic Air Command's (SAC) response to a
sinnulated attack on the United
States.
The service member is among the
more than 100,000 U. S, Air Force,
Navy, Marine Corps and Canadian
personnel taking part in SAC's
largest, no-notice, 30-day training

SPECIALS

EAmR CAKES
AND COOKIES
ARE OUR
SPECIALTIES.
POM
EROY · ·
PASJRY SHOP
216 E. Mlin

VAN DE KAMP
UGHT CRISP

FISH FILLET

~~$12t

' tn-2971

Food St1mps Acc.,ted

·•·

Russell, who heads that program ad- r~e~x~er~c~ise~·--------.1~~~=====~=~
vises that many confined patients
..-r,....,.
....................................................................................
&amp;
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
prefer the " hom4;-sty!e" bed pads to
the commercial variety.
4
~
To continue the program, the Cen•
~
ter is in need of worn white sheets
'
which have parts to be salvaged and
recycled into useful bedpads.
•
~
Pomeroy, Ohio

STAR KIST

6

•

MEIGS INI\1
PIZZA SHACI&lt;

Named to dean 's list

RACINE - Dave Foreman, Por·
!land, a 1980 graduate of Southern
POMEROY-The Area School of High School and a member of last
Religion of the Hocking District will year's Southern High School cham·
be held at the Noami Baptist Church pionship basketball team, has been
in Pomeroy begining Wednesday.
named to the dean's list of
Sessions will be held at 7 p.m. and Washington Technical College,
will continue for six consecutive Route 2, Marietta, for the winter
Wednesdays. The instructor will he quarter.
the Rev. Samuel Jackson.

Has sons dedicated

Takes part in exercise

•
, M'"'
:

,
•

l'ro

;~nd

S.tt., ·100

,1 Oil 11 llfi

1·00

Sund;1y 4:00 11:00
PHONE 991' 6674

•

1•

~
1

•

3

• Whole Kernel Corn
• Crnm Style Corn
1 •

Cut Green Beans

• French Style Green Beans
• SwHt Peas

'····~·······~····~···~~

Nobody knows

more about
Homeowner Loans
than City Loan.
We oon't have to tell you about
the high cost of living these days. But
prices aren't all that's going up. The
value of your house is, too. In fact, it's
worth far more today than ever before.
A1 City Loan, we can help you
tum that increasing value Into the
money you need to meet major
wan~ or needs. like a college
education. Or remodeling the
house. Or to make a special
dream come true. With a
Homeowner Loan of up to
_...,.• .,..!II!,P..'!Ill..,,· $50,000 or more.
.. · • "
When it comes to solving a big
money problem, Ohio people .
know where to tum. To City Loan. Because nobody
knows you- and your needs-like we do.
CITYLO\N

COMPANY

1 2~

VEGETABLES

••

~
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OPEN:
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OIL OR WATER PACKED

F.. Main St. •992· 2171

Gl
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BAtHROOM TISSUE

16 oz. BTlS.

To

a·~;~·a

'

ASSORTED COLORS OR WHITE

MAXWELL HOUSE

99C

29 .

All GRINDS
-·~

CIIFEE

-;:-

1-Lb.
· Can

59c
KRISPY CRACKERS····
ARMOUR ...~~.~.~ ...$1 19
!REET
y,
BOUNTY.......~.~.~! 89~
$
59 ICE CREAM .......................~.~....~ 119
1
2% MILK ...............~.~~~.............
99~
POT PIES ................. 3
MARGARINE.••...... ~ .......•. 3
69
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C
PIZZAS
..
}:.~: 994
conAGE•••.•••••••~119
2
SUNSHINE

29-oz.
Can

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FREEZER VALUES

DAIRY VALUES

CARDINAL

CARDINAL OR GARVIN'S .

ASSORTED FLAVORS

PLASTIC

CARDINAL

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BANQUET

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BEEF, CHICKEN or TURKEY

8 oz.
PKGS.

1-1.8. PKGS.

GARVIN'S FRESH

CARDINAL

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SOFT

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TOTINO'S ASSORTED

VITAGOLD

16 oz.
TUBS .

ORANG! ••••

,.

..

�. Pag~6-The

Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

Monday, March 30, \981

Middleport, Ohio

,_

ImP-ortant news for ultra low tar smokers.

l}j}j}l.\..ft f8}'ft ~

Television
•
•
VIewmg

f.. ,! 1-!AV£ TO GO
ONSTACSE IN A
F!!'W MINUTES,

HY-

•

I
I KJ

·I RANGL

_..__
JECET I
( J rJ
e ...,. ,.,c...-,,-~,

EVENING

memettJilbidlle NEws

(l) RAINBOW FACTORY

(]) MOVIE ·(liNIMATEO) "10
11
Anlm81tymplca"
(I)
CAROL BURNETT AND

.

IF THE'Y CAN MAio:!
A OEAL WITH HEll: 1
THi\Y'LL 511 ONTO 1'1

LE'n; JUST CALL
HIM AN OIL COMPANY

TROV.LI*HOOT6~-­

T0 U5E A POLITE TERM!

8:30

lfiCH N/trl DIL 1'/fU1-

WirH ~0 IXPI.DifAT/DN
I~IN#f/,.,

~AVVY

YOLI

IIIOW'
1

'

7:30

IU?U-86~
'SrOCK
~~

~

fOR"I'€W

wwres.
MlE:&gt;IIT

7:58
8:00

A&lt;;~t.

.

SAHDY! WHAT'S THAT
THIH6 ()I 'IOLR FACE?'

FRIENDS
CIJ ABC NEWS
C1J 3-2·1 CONTACT
liD OVER EASY Gueot : Ed Ames .
Host: Hugh Downs . (Cioaed·
Captioned: U.S.A.)
CIJeiJl NBC NEWS
(l) THE DOOR
(I) BOB HE-ART SHOW
C1J FACE THE MUSIC ,
8CIJ®l CBS NEWS
C1J WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
liD LILIAS, YOGA AND YOU
ABC NEWS
(l) ~BNUPOATENEWS
i l l e PM MAGAZINE
(l) NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
C1J ALLIN THE FAMILY
(J)(JI)e FAMILY FEUD
IJl NASHVILLE ON THE ROAO
D CIJ TIC TAC DOUGH
CIJ lllJ
MACNEIL·LEHR£R
REPORT
11m NEWS
Clle BULLSEYE
(l) WOAOS OF HOPI!
(])ADOLFHITLER:PORTRAITDF
A TYRANT With the help of exclu·
slve film footage, HBO preaenta a
powartulponia It of a power-crazed
man. HaiHotbrook hoate thla tacln·
ating documentary.
(I) SANFORD AND SON
(J)DCIJ JOKER'S WILD
Ill@) HOLUYWOOO SOUIIRI!S
(l)lllJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
FACE THE MUSIC .
(l) CBN UPDATE NEWS
ClleiJl NCAA NATIONAL COL·
LEGE BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP NBC aportecaatera O'clc En·
berg, Billy Packer and AI McGuire
·will be on hand to report on the
climactic momenta in this season's
col lege basketball rivalry, when
the two top teams face each other
on the court at the Spectrum in
Phil•delphia . (2 hra., 20mina.)(The
teams were unavailable at praaa
time .)
(l) ,AMERICAN CATHOLIC
(]) MOVIE ·(DRAMA) •••

~-·'•"" ""'

I

I HYRITT±

WHA'T HE WA~
DREAMIN&amp; OF
PUTTlN&amp;ON.

IGOTFERj:
I I r J

I!Jle

' 8:58
7:00
'

b~HenrlArnoldandBobloe

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to form
four ordinary words .

MARCH 30, 11181

8:oo

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD UAME

f!iJ \!dJ ~~ ®

Prlntanswerh818:"(

Now arrange the circled letters to
lorm the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon .

I I J( XXI I ]
{Answers tomorrow)

Saturda~ ··l Juml&gt;lli J BRINY
.

VIRUS LOUNGE CENSUS
Answer · As beginners, they appear to have no bad
hablto"-"NO·VICES"

JI.Nftb6t 8ooi. No. 15; c::ontafnlno 110 puutn., II IYIIII!bte lor $1.75 poe;tpllld
from JumiMe, clo thltntWr~rr, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 0714&amp;.1nclude your
name, addrwa, Jlp code •
1111ke checb payabte to Newsp~~plfbooks .

BRIDGE
Second hand high strategy
Jy Olwald Jacoby
aad Alaa Soalag

lllle

NORTH

11

"ApocAIJPM Now 1171
(I) MOVIE ·!DRAMA) ••• "They

Shoot Hor••• Don't Tha,?"
1HG ~
(I)@ II SHOW BUSINESS David

3·30·81

+6 3 2
.AK75

Oswald: "Here is an old
favorite hand to show when it
is really importanl to play
second hand high."
· Alan: "Playing at three no
, trump, South ducks the first
:spade and wins the second.
Then he goes to dummy and
leads a diamond. Preferably
the four. II East is sitting
there taking a nap. he plays
his three, South plays the ten,
West takes his jack and South
runs off the rest of the tricks.
II East is wide awake he plays
his king of diamonds and the
three notrump contract

t84
+AKQ6
WEST
EAST
+74
+KQJ109
'U tos
•Q9 42
+J96
+K3
+JtOB73
+u

SOUTH

.,3

+AB&gt;

.AQI07i2
+54

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North

w...

collapses. n
South
Frost and SandyHi II heat thiallghth ·
Oswald: "II South lets the
earted, provocatilo'e and lntorma·
live special on the world of enter·
Pass
king ·hold, East rattles off
2NT
tainment . Featured repor1alnclude
Pass
Pa..
enough spade tricks to defeat
'Marilyn Monroe: Suicide Or
Pass
him. II he takes his ace, he
Murder,· 'Pat Benatar: Hot Quean
can't ever bring in the diaOf Rock,' and 'An Extra Is Boril: Co·
mond suit."
starring Jack Lemmon and Walter
Opening lead:+7
Alan: "We don't think too
Ma1thau. · (80 mimt.)
·
much
of
South's
notrump
call.
IIOD~THEBUGSBUNNYEA.
He might well have rebid to
TERSPECIALSugaBunny, with the
. three diamonds . II North
aid of Daffy Duck. Yosemite Sam,
Pepe La Pew, and Foghorn Lagh· , passed , South would make a
diamonds, .South ·must take an
orn, helps a de8per8te Granny find · nice part score. II Norlh
early diamond finesse, cash
a substitute for the Easter Bunny, · raised to four diamonds and
the ace and then discard a
who is bedridden with a cold . (60 · South continued to the dia·
spade on dummy's third-high
mine.)
: mood game, he could make it
club. He can start by either
0D GREAT PERFORMANCES: against any defense."
taking, or ducking, the first
DANCE 1H AMERICA 'The Tom·
Oswald: " Piavini in five
spade.''
peat ' Tet8caat live, the San Fran·
otaco Ballet presents Michael
Smuin 'a 'The Tempest', a rull·
length , origina l ballet basad on
Shakaa'peare's romantic comedy.
Scheduled to appear in the produc·
tion are Evelyn Cisneros aa Miran·
da, Altila Ficzere u Proepero,
David McNaughton a a Ariel and
lty THOMAS JOSEPH .
Tomm Ruud a a ~erdinand . (2 hra.)
ACROSS
4 Jacket style
(llJ SANDBURG'S LINCOLN Part
Three
I Rely on
5 Temporary star
8:30 (l) NEW BIIILE BAFFLE SHOW
7 Andress film 6 Druggists •
8:58 (l) CBN UPDATE NEWS
8:00 (l) 700 CLUB
) 10 D.C. VJ.P.
weight
[f) (JI). JOHN DENVER AND
II
Bauble
7
Fabrications
GEORGE BURNS: TWOOFAKIND
12 Verdi opera 8 Jordanian
John Oenll't'lf and George Burna get
together for an hour of muaic and
14 Angelus
mountain
comedy featuring portions of their
9
Watch
prayer
concert at the LO!B Angeles Am ·
~itheatre . (60 mine.)
15 Belgian
10 Thailand
Yesterday'• Alllwer
aCIJ~M.A.S.H.MalorWinchea·
province
13 Haul
terbecomealncrea alngly recluai'ole
16 Lakelet
17 Dutch
24 Blackbird
and introspecti11e after a sniper at:37 Famous
tack on the camp.
18 French
township
26 Word before
Israeli
lllJ SANDBURG'S LINCOLN Pan
19 Burmese
fisted
author
39 Stallone film
Four
8:20 CIJe SPORTSWORLD
21 Facts
knife
27 Get - of
40 Bombay water
8:30 0 CIJ ~ HOUSE CALLS When
or figures 28, Feminists' 28 Unending
vessel
Charley break a a date with Ann for
Z5
War
of
,
concern
28
Chemical
a beaaball game and than break a
41 In balance
anotherdatetogoto apokerpar1y, 1
suffix
Jenkins'
(abbr.)
t3 Sire's mate
Ann becomes interested in a hand· ·
!t Candlenut 33 Equip
U French king ·
aome...E..atient .
%6 Scott Joplin
tree
35 English poet t5 Clwnsy
10:00 [f) IUl II
53rd ANNUAL
ACADEMY AWARDS PR!SENTA·
opera
%3 Craggy spot 36 Title holder
vessel
TIONA galaxy Of Hollywood's big·
30
Drollery
oeet atara. past and present, will be
31 Desolate
honored in person andontUmwhen
the 53rd Annual Academy Awards
3% European
Presentation Ia telecast li'ole from
river
the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion of
th e Loa Angeles Music· Center .
34 Biblical
Johnny Car a on will bathe aole mae·
kingdom
tar ol ceremonies of the event for
38 Winchester
the third consecutive year . (2 hrs.,
30 mina_j
or Enfield
DCIJ~ LDUGRANTLouhaoto
42
Be indebted to
work a double shift and gets an eye
43 Mozart opera
opening en count erwll h a aid eof th e
Tribune thai's new to him, the ec·
46 Nobokov
centrl c ni ghl s ldecrew . (Repeat: 60
novel
mina .)
(])
CROSSROADS: SOUTH
47 More strict
AFRICAMade without the approval
48 Gram
or consent of South Atrica ' a
molecule
go\lernment,
thia
powerful
documentary peraonalizea the
49 Oiler
issue of black resistance to South
DOWN
Africa ·a alate enforced ayetam ot
racial discrimination (apar1held) .
1 Dig into
lllJ NEWS
2 Join up
10:20 Ill SPORTSWORLD
3 Average
10:28 (l) CBN UPDATE NEWS
10:30 (l) RISE AND BE HI!ALEO
MOVIE -(DRAMA) u "Carnw"

2.

·~~···~•r

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

WINNIE
NOT ONLY THAT,
WE CANYA~5EI7 EVERY·

SOOY

IN THE WHOLE

NE ICSHSORHOOO.

THAT'$
CONSUELO WROTE
HER MOTH oR JUST
A FEW DAYS

AGO!

Only
4 mgtar

MERIT

MERIT
- Ultra Lights

Ultra Ughts

-i

BARNEY

YOU'D MAKE A
PLUMB DANDY

OH, LAWSY!! I SCORCHED

I

TH'SEATOF PAW'S BRITCHES

REVENOOER

Regular&amp;
Menthol

rn

11180

(I) TBS EVENING NEWS

liD

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work il:

OUTER LIMITS

10:58 (l) ~liN UPDATE NEWS
11:00 ClleiJlectJ~ NEWS
(l) fESTIVAL DF PRAISE

C1J

Ia

MORECAMBE AND WISE

11:28 (]) CBN UPDATE NEWS
11:30 []) e IJ) THI! TONIGHT SHOW

PEANUTS

4 mg "ra( 0.4 mg mco11 ne av. per c1gareue by FTC Mel hod

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Oangerous to Your Health.

1...------------------------.....J
j

'

I

Cl Ploil ip Mvuis 111..-. 19M I

UltraLi~

OKA'{, CHUCK, VOI.I'VE BEEN
PESTERING ME FOR A
CHANCE TO PITCH .. LET'S
SEE WftAT '(OU CAN DO...

IT'S THE LAST OF THE NINTfl.
TWO OVT5 AND WE'RE A~EAD
FIFTI' TO NOTHING ...

WE'RE 50 FAR AHEAD WE .
CAN'T LOSE .XOU PITCH
THE LAST OVT, CHUCK. AND
I'LL SELL THE POPCORN!

'TheBeat01'CaraOn· Gueata: Angie
Dickinson, Tom Snyder, Ray Price.
(B_epeat; 60 mine.)
Cil ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
CIJMOVIE-(MUSICAL) 0 ' "A Song
11 8or11" 1148
.
DCIJCBSLATI!MOVIE'OutNCV.
M .E.: The Death Challenge'
Magician Harry Whitehea.d comes
out ot retirement to Introduce a
water tank l llu~Jion to hia protege ;
when the protege dies, Quincy
becomea auapicloua of Whl ·
!ahead ' s motl..,ea. (Repeat)
'HARRY 0 : Forbidden City' Whllo
trying to help a friend, Harry linda
himself embroiled in the black mar·
ketlng of Oriental an treaaurea .
(Repeal}
(I) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS

1

AX\'DLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used lor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc . Single letters,
apostrophes. the length and formation of lhe words are all
hints . Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES
JGY

GYTERCYF

LUDH

IS N E

LUDH

YSOSD

WS

MGBBSD

ERGY

PYNCYCMRSB?

TSM;

WSFPY .

.

JRDCMECYG ·

DUMMSEEC

Yeaterday'a Cryptoqaete: HAPPINESS SNEAKS IN :
11IROUGH A DOOR YOU DIDN'T KNOW YOU lEFT
OPEN. -JOHN BARRYMORE

.,

�·-- - --

- -·.

-- --

~-

- ·- -

Your
Libraries
book a projector, too. Your
libraries own one projectcr (a
gift from the Friends of the
Ubraries) . They have a second
prjector !l"d a screen owned by
OVAL, the library cooperative.
Right now, the gift projector Is in
Athens for repairs. This meall9
that everyone must share one
projector. We know it's inconvenient for you and requires ·
some extra effort on the part of
everyone who must share - but
we are all stuck with that
situation Wttil the second projector comes back from Athens.
There are many films available
for borrowing - over 600 at last
count. They range from films for
preschoolers through a couple of
Kipling's Jungle Tales (like
Mowgll's Brothers) through a
very few Walt Disneys to
specialized films, like those
showing childbirth or gardens in
Japan. Naturally, the very best
films suitable for the greatest
range of audiences are the bar·
destto get.
Your libraries exist to serve
you. The library staff tries very
hard to make you happy. We
don't like unhappy "customers"
any more than stores do. So,
please: book yolir films early, be
sure to book the projector if you
don't have one available to you,
be especially sure to book the
screen if you want it (most folks
just use a wall), and be patient
and cooperative when we have to
make 0111 projector do the work .
of two and one film collection serve hundreds of thousands of
people.

BY ELLEN BElL

....

Ubrarlan
Last week's column had some
of the things I was reminded to
"tell people about." Here are
more:
Your libraries can provide you
with films and filmstrips to see at
home, at work, in school, in church, at club meetings, or wherever
else you want tbem. But there is a
catch: the films are housed in
Caldwell, Ohio, and shared by
users in more than 20 libraries.
Because your public Ubracy film
service is free, the films are very
heavily booked. Especially
during the school year, a film you
want for one specific date may be
impossible to get.
· Films can be booked for
specific dates up to three months
in advance. But those who can
plan farther ahead should. The
people who work at your libraries
will take the list of films you
request and call in orders for the
next
available
month
automatically (given the fact
that it's done by hwnan beings) .
By calling in as soon as the films
can be booked, we can get more
of what you want.
Most people book films for a
single day and return them the
next day. If you will need yours
longer, you must say so when you
make your original request.
Otherwise, we will all he unhappy.
Most of the people who book
films have access to a projector.
· The folks in your libraries
assume that you do - unless you
say very clearly that you want to

Besides gasoline, tbe station sella various snack foodJ ,
dairy products and cigarets. Hours are 6 a.m. to 11
p.m., Mond~y through Saturday, and 8 a.m. to 11 p.m.
on Sunday.

FIRST- The first self-service gasoUne station iD
Pomeroy bas been opened on W. MaiD St., at tbe former Lou's Ashland Station. Manager of tbe exclusively
self-service station Is DaDDy Richards of Middleport.

April named
Cancer Month

.

·,'
'

!.

April has been designated as Cancer Control Month in Meigs County
and Friday Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews signed a proclamation
calling for all citizens to head the
life-saving messages of the
American Cancer Society and to
provide generous support for its 1981
Cancer Crusade.

,-

The proclamation notes that the
principal purpose of the American
Cancer Society's annual educational
and fund-raising Cancer Crusade is
to make the commWtity aware of
health-preserving opportunities.

SIGNS PROCLAMATION- Mayor Andrews signs a proclamation
designating April as Cancer Control Month. With bim is Joan Anderson,
president of Meigs uult ACS.

Emphasis of the Society is on increasing the one-third of all cancer
patients being saved today to as
much as SO percent through earlier
detection and treabnent. With
Mayor Andrews as he signed the
proclamation was Joan Anderson,
president of the Meigs Unit,
American Cancer Society.

OES to have sales----,--------The Harrisonville Chapter, Order and 11, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. All members
of Eastern Star, will have a rwn· are asked to take nunmage to the
mage and bake sale at the Mid· building on April 9 at 1 p.m. or for
dleport Masonic Temple on AprillO pickup to cal Pauline Atkins, 7422634 or Goldie Reed, 992-7206.

Monda

March 30, 1911

Group
names
officers

Wlfll.r te IllY
WANTED TO BUY :
GOLD,
SILVER,
PLATINUM, STERLING·
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR·
Y, MISC. ITEMS. AB·
MARKET
SOL UTI!
PRICE GUARANTED. ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
OH 10 992-3476.

l1
Hom11 for Solo
In Langsville ore1, two
bedroomhomtonllndeights acrts . Newly
remodeled Wltn ctllor with
overhead building and
garage. For more Info call
742·2541. MIU20'S.·
;===~~~======
j2
MolllltHomll
ter Sole

Officers were elected at the
Tuesday night meeting of the Ohio
Eta Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority beld at the Meigs Inn.

OLD COINS, pocket wal·
Chel, CIIU rings, wedding
bonds, diamonds. Gold or
sllvor. Coli J. A. Wamsley,
Treaourt Chell Coin Shop,
Alhtns, OH. 594-4221.

1973 crown Haven, 14 x 65,
three bedlooms, new car·

f

Elected were Janelle Haptonstall,
president; . Pat Circle, vice
president; Johanna Shuler, recording secretary; Jenny Smith,
treasurer; Darla Kelly, correspono
ding secretary; Carol Crow,
parliamentarian; and Tonya Davis,
city council representative.
Nominees for the girl of the year
were named and include Johanna
Shuler, Unda Faulk, Lori Warner,
and Nancy Hill. Announcement will
be made at the FOWlder's Day dinner in April.
Kathy Cumings presided at the
meeting during which time members were reminded that Easter can·
dy will be made at the home of Mrs.
Warner on April7. Sbe will be bi)dng
orders for candy at 992-7702 along
with colored Easter eggs.

·

The chapter will also sell refreshments at an auction on April H . Jenny Smith and Mrs. Cumings served
refreslunents. Dina Gryszka and
Connie Dodson presented the
cultural program. They introduced
Kenda Williams, teacher, who gave
a demonstration on exercise and
dance.

Pub lic Notice

-

SUPERIOR COURT
OF SPOKANE
COUNTY, WASHINGTON
IN THE MATTER OF THE
ADOPTION OF :
VINCENT THOMAS ,
A Minor.

File No. 81400347-0

'
'
l
'

NOTICE TO : NON·
CONSENTING NATURAL
FATHER.
TO : JIM FERGUSON,

JR. and to all whom it may
concern :

L

YOU ARE HEREBY
NOTIFIED thai !here Ms

_, been fi led in

t~e

above en·

_

--;:-:-:~=-=---

--~
P~u~bl~ic~N
~o~l~
ic~e~-

titled Cou r t a Petition tor
the Step· Parent Adoption
of the above named child,
praying also that there be
first an adjudication that
the consent of the natural
father of said chi ld is not
required by Law.

YOU
ARE
ALSO
NOTIFIED that the con·

or Write Daily Sentinel Cla'ssified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomero.,, 0., 4S769

I

eANNOUNCEMENTS
1- (ud ol Ttt•nMI

l - llnnounc•menu
4-Gi lti!IWII'f
, _ HIIPP'flldl
6-Loll•nd Found

44- Ap•rtmtnt lor A tnt
4S- FAooms
4.-Sptct lorAtnt
47- W•nted loA tnt

1- Yilrd Slife
1- Pvbllc .Sli fe
I Auct10n .

41-E guipmenllor

eMERCHANDISE

11 - Helpw.nltd

)1 - Housettolcl Goods
n-ee. TV. ItildtoEQIIIPm•nt
Sl- AnttQUU
)4- MISC Mtrcn•ndoU
SS- 8 utldtng5uppi1U

ll - Situ•te-&lt;:1 Wllnltcl
U - lnlur•nu
14 - Bus intn Tr••ning
1, - SCI'IOOIS IOSinlCTion
16-

,._Pets tor S.lt

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

lil•diO, TV

&amp; CB Rep11 1r
11- Wuted To Do

at - F•rm EqlltPmtnt

•FINANCIAL

.-

11 '

IUtin•u

Opportunity
22- Money to Lotn
23- P r oltnion•l

eTRANSPORTATION

eREAL ESTATE

71-Aulos tor Slile

I
I

Cl ass lfle d s and
Save I I I
Write your own ad and order by mail with Tllis
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone ow •ten you get
results. Money not refundable .

Print one word in each
space below . Each in·
it ial or group of figures
cou nts as a word. Count
name and address or
phone number if used .
You 'l l get Qetfer results
if you deScr ibe fully ,
give pr ice . The Sentinel
reserves the r ight to
classify , edit or reject
any ad . Your ad will be
put in the proper
clasificarion if you ' II
check the proper box

) For Sa le
) Announcement
I For Rent

JJ- V•n,a•w.o

H - Auto

J4- 811tinHIIll i!Gt ngl
Ji-Lots &amp; Acrugl
U - liiUI Etl•t•W•nttd

~.pair

1. _ _ _ _ _ __

2-------3 . ~---~-

e SERVICES

l1- l!ultors

want·Ad Advertising
Deadlines
~ ; JO P.M. D111l'f
12 Noon Sllurdry
lo r Mond•~

11 - Home tmprovtm•nts
U - Pfumb1ng&amp; Eau v• t 1ng

··------5. _ _ _ _ _ __

U - E~cavlitfnt

14- Eftelrlc•l
&amp; R t lrlter•tlon
IS- G•n•nl H1111ilnt
..- M .M. lhptir
17-UPhOIIttrY

6.
--_
-_
-'7. _
_
_
__
8. _ _ _ _ __
9 . _ _ _ _ _ __

10.
11 . _ _ _ _ _ __
Rates and Other lniormat!on
s

1 Worllt or Undtr

Idly
1 •• .,,

l dlyl
• dlyl

12. _ _ _ _ _ __
13 . _ _ _ _ _ _ __

c..,
1.00
I.JO
2. 00

'·"

Chartt

us

1.90

us
us

llch • .ord over thr m 1n1mum I S wwordl 11 • ctnts Hr word ~t~r Clly .
Afl r11nntn, 0tt1•r lhlln CClni.(UI IIt. d•YI will be Cf!llrttcl If Ute Idly

'

'I''
'
I

I

'
'
1-

,.,..

II ORIGINAL AS THE SAME
APPEARS OF RECORD .
I ATTEST IOMARCH, 1981

i COUNTY
l, CLERK

CLERK AND
OF
THE
II SUPERIOR COURT IN

have

performed

a

minimum of five similar

Men's Fellowship held
THE Men's Fellowship of the First
SoUthern Baptist Church was held
recently with the Rev. WUIJam
Newman serving homemade chill.
Roger Turner had devotiona with a
study on "Seeking Spiritual
Wisdom." Next meeUng will be
April 28 at the church with Lee
Lefebre to prepare oyster ·stew for
the dinner. Attenclillj! were the Rev.
Mr. Newman, Joe King, Lee
Lefebre, Bill McClure, Sonny McClure, Bob Mills, Clinton Turner,
Roger Turner, and Troy Zwilling.

BY A. po~~n~~
I il l 26, 21 . 29 , 30, 31, w 1.
1 6tc
:

===:JP~u;b~l~icJN;o~t;ic~e====

14. - - - - - - - - 15.- - - - - - - -

16. ---------- -

I PAY highMI prices
possible for gold and silver

coins, rings, jewelry, etc.

a.

Columbus, Ohio 43220.
CO~ies

TRACT

of the CON·
DOCUMENTS

may be obtained at the of·
fice of Burgess and Niple,

Public Notice
PROB.ATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
Estote of NANCY REED,

S185.00 to S500 weekly doino
mailing work. No ex·
perltnce requirecl. AP·
PLY: Circle Sales, P.O.
Box 224·0, Richmond Hill,
NY 11418.
WANTED. People to
Avon. Wwk your
hours. Part·llme or
lim. If Interested call
2354 or 742·2755.

sell
own
full
742·

Art Craft Concept. Is now
conselors

and

managers. Exceptional
earning program. Well
Mlabllshed comJ&gt;~~ny with
excluSive products. No In·
vestment,

collecting.

delivery ,

Crall

or

ex·

periMKe not required. For

Interview call 256·9363
evenings and weekend•.
RN's and LPN'S.
mediate openings

lm·
ior

registered

and

nurses

llcenMd practical nurses.
Competitive salarv com·

mensurate wlln experience
and trainings. Exceptional
benefits . Contact Per·
sonnel Director, Lakin
Hospital, Lakin, WV 25250.
Phone 1·304·675·3230.

NOW TILL EASTER lOS
off paint, 30'16 off or~·

ware. Drehel's Ceramics.
59 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport,

Dh. 992-2751.

M.T. OR M.L.T . wanted ·
prefer a certified person
with blood bank ex·
perlence,
a
hospital
associated wltn college
M.L.T. program . Com·
pelellve waoes and
benet Its . Contact Per·
sonnel Dept. at Pleasant
Valley Hosp., Valley Dr.,
Pl. Pleasant W.VA . 25550
. 675·4UI.
U
Slluollons Wonltd
WELDlNG done, 10 years
experience, equipped to do

M•rch 20. 1911
Contract Sales
LegoiCopy
No.l1 ·201
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
FRHIGGR(651
FR·OOOR(661
SR·OOOR (lSI
Sealed propsals will

upon the Ohio real estate of

such decedent .
Robert E. Buck
Judge
Ill 30, (416, 13, 3tc

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

~e

rece ived at the office of the
Director of the Ohio Depar·
tment of Transportation,

Columbus, Ohio, until10 :00
A.M.• Dhlo Standard Time,
Tuesday, April 21, 1981, fw

Wllshlngton Counties, Ohio,
on various locations, by ap·
plying paint for lane, cen·
ter and edge lines.

The Ohio Department of
Transportation hereby
nollfiM all bidders that 11
will affirmatively Insure

thllt In any contract entered Into purSuant to this
advertisement, minority

business enterprises will be
afforded full opportunity to
submit bids In rMponse to
tnis invitation and will not
be discriminated aoainst
on the grounds of race,
color or national origin In
cons 1deration
far
lin
award.
" Minimum wage rates

for thiS prolect nave been
predetermined as required
by law and are set fortn In
the0 bid proposal."

The date set for com ·
pletian of this work shall be
set forth In the bidding
propoSlll ."

Eacn bidder snail be
required to file with hiJ bid
a certified cneck or
cashier's che&lt;:k tor an
emount equal to five per
cent of his bid. but In no

Real Estote _ Generol

!:IO_BSIEIIER REALTY
Office 742·2GG3
George s. Hollstefler Jr.
Broker

. OUT OF TOWN - 3
bedroom block home
with hardwood floors.
All city utilities and on 1
snady acre. Just$30,000.
YOUR SUBDI\IISJON
- 31V, acres on old Rl.
33 . Ideal for sub·
dividing. You name the

addition end the streets,
we'll do the rest.. Less

than S2,000 a hovse site .
FOR RENT OR LEASE
- 5,000 sq. fl. of space
all on ground floor . Only
5250 per month .
45 ACRES - Wild and
wooly In Rutland
Township , Electric and
water available. Oil
drilling all around pro·

perty : Want only
SIS.OOO.
YOUR MfNI ·FARM Clloose as much as you

wish, 3, 5, or 10 acres.
Tall trees, water , elec·
tric, and natural gas
available.

SYRACUSE

-

. Good

125

acres

of

ing &amp; kitchen comb.,
cart»ort with storage, on

2 acres. S32,000.GG .

NEW LISTING
· FARM, 175 acres,
pasture and timber ,
remodeled two story
home, basement, large
barn, gllrage, storage

1/ldg. on Shade River.
NEW LISTING
HYSELL RUN RD. Lovely 3 bedroom home,
living

6
Lostond Found
'---==="-"="--Lost : largo male german
shephard answering to the
name of Shadow. Wearing
a oreen collar. Child's pet.

Lost In the Pomeroy area .

992·6756. May nave sllg/11
limp on right back hlp.

Public So It
.-.
'
-" '' "
&amp; Auction
2
In Mtmorllm ~ AUCTION tVtr·Y Friday
nloht 7 p.m. Hartford Com·
In Iovino memory of Dian munlly Center. Hartford,
E. Goodwin who passed w.va .
away eleven years ago -==7.;=:::;:::;::;::::::;:::==
today, March 30, 1970. .=
Sadly missed by mother, 9,___~W!!:o~n~t.!Ced~lo~B!!.!u!.JYL-.
brothers, and sister.
CHIP WOOD. Poles m'lx.
diameter 14" on largest
3
Announcements
end. S12.50 per ton. Bundled
MEIGS MUSEUM open by slab. S10.SO per ton.
appointment January·Mar· Delivered to Ohio Pellet
ch. 992·2264, 992·2802, 992· Co., Rock Springs Rd.,
2300 or 992·2639. Histories Pomeroy 992·U89.
for sale Pomeroy ·
MiddlepOrt Libraries.
IRON AND BRASS BEDS ·
Did furniture, desks, gold
Maternity Clothes at af· rings, Jewelry, sliver
fordable prices. Nursing dollars, Jltrllng, etc. Wood
bras and gowns. Water· Ice boxn, 11rs, anflqun.
melon Patch, 5th and Main, etc. complete houMholds. ·
New Haven, West Vlroinle. Write: M.D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Phone 1 · 304 · ~ · 3410 .
Pomeroy, OH 457~. Or
cell992·7760.
IT'S BEELINE'S Show and
Tell Tlmelllll our new New, uMd. and antique fyr·
spring and summer line Is nlluro . No Item to large or
now ·~•liable and Is II un· to small. Will buy one pftce
bellevablellll Give us a or complot. houMhoiijs,
call for more Information Merlin's Gtnerat Store at
about this In terM ling work. 992·6370.
Phone 992·3941 from 9·6.
Now buyl"" gold and
LOCKSMITH
Service, silver, old pocket wotch..,
Mioster Keying, Com· chains, diii!IOndl, sllv'er
binlflont, Bonded. Call : money and colno. Merlin's
New Haven, W.Va. 304 · ~· General Store, MlddlepOI't.
2079 .
992·6370.
"

That Silken Look

room, equipped kitchen,
full basement with wood
burner, 3 rooms
bath,on approx .

'12

acres. 142.000.00.
RUTLAND - Nice all
electric 3 bedroom
home, bath, living
room , kitchen 8. dining

comb., utility, garage
situated on large lot.

SJ6.500.00.
HARRISONVILLE

$2,800.00.
Cheryl Lemley, Anoc .
Phone 742·3171

Velma Nlcinskv, ~ssoc.

Phono 742·JCI'2

NEW Ll STING -

113

Riverview in Pomeroy .
convenient location, 3

bedrooms.

full

base·

ment, large lot, large

dining room and living
room . Won't last tong .

$35,000.00.
NEED 4 BEDROOMS?
If so, this 2 story
frame home witn
aluminum siding, part
basement,
storage
building, and nice kit·
chen cabinets is just for

you. $26.900.00.
EASTERN DISTRICT
This beautiful 23
acres has a building
site, bottom land, for·
rest, and a small creek

running througn 11.
518.000.00 .
APPLE GROVE - Nice
laying 13.76 acres with

Will babysit in my home In
Syracu11 or yours. Ex·
perltnced end will sit any
- · Phone 992·3110, 992·
2719, or 949·2791 .

an

older

shrubbery

bedrooms,
ment,
a

Furnace repairs, electrical

mobile

home "" residence. 992·

5858.

Young lady Is willing to
Noat, fast, end reasonable.
Phone 949·2202.

... -...........
......
'

Homtslor Solo
BHUiiful three bedroom
ronch brick home In Baum
Addition, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Gil heat, central air. Cell'
992·2571 or 1-617 ·~·129.

II

PRIVATE lilting, 3
bedroom homo on S.R. 7
neor Memory Gordtns. 211'J
tern. Terms. 992·7741.
Brick hOUM on woodtd lot.
ThrH bedrooms, largt kit·
chen, family room, double
gar-. dick. Mld·Sixlln.
992·5420.
One floor six room fuel tl·
flclont hoult with garage.
NMr Mlddl-' buslnell
dlatrlct. 992·7329 ofttrnoons
oncl evonlngs.

Fit wilhout fUss-no waist seom,
no complicltion~ no dulch! Wide

bands autlint lhe pntly scooped
and slit nec~ine. Perflct I« kn1ts
- solid or print.
P1inlod Patt11n 1676: Miues
Sim8, 10, 12. 14. 16, 18. 20. Silt
12 (bust 34) llloes 2 S/8 Jllds
60-inch fllllic .

full

garage

workshop .

'
'"

243 IIIII 17 ~ , ....,
IGOII. l'rltlt
MIDilS$,
liP, SIZE, . .
.UIIIU.
We strtelnlin.d 111t sew1nc 1o
IIIII IOU time SO IOU tan sawt

41
HOUIII for Rtnt
3 bedroom furnished houM
on 3rd St., MiddiiPOrt
Deposit &amp; referencei
required. 992·2606.

IllfiiMilllilllllllll. .n
1»1 ........w. 1.75

2 bedroom houst In Roclne
with large storage 1 ,..1
Comr,lettly
furnlohtd ·
utili!" paid. S3JO. monttl
plus dtposlt. Glen Bllllll
949·:1101 or 949·2160.
'

mo.

ROGER HYSEll'S
,.
GARAGE.
I

&amp; ASSOC.

· -Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair

no rwoney down
Federal Housing l% on ns.ooo
S% on balance .
Conwentional Loans-

Hrs.: Mon.-Fri •

9 A.M .·5:30 P.M.

down

Call for 1nformafion

992-5682

992·7544

10·Hfc

J S0"-2D-30"H.P.
HA 60"-25·60 H.P.
60" -45·80 10&gt;.
All Modols
Available

LEO MORRIS
Rt . 1 Side Hill Rd.

Autos for Sale

3 AND ~ RM furnished opts. Phone 992· 543~.

power drivers seat. 742·
2501.

RIVERSIDE APTS. 1 So 2
bedroom apart
available.
Equal op·
portunlty nouslng. 992·7721.

1971 Ford Torino two door
In good condition with
radials. Good oas rnueage.
1495.00. 667·3085 Tuppers
Plains, onto.

Free Estimates

72
Trucks for Sole
1976
For.d
4 x 4 F250 with
week .
Kitchen,
and power steering, power
·television lounge. Carryout brakes,
eutomallc.
Jlore and restaurant within S2400.00. 985·4133.
500 feel. 992·6370.

H. L WRITESEL .

ROOFING

~

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

for antiques and collec-

tibles or entire estates.
Nothing . too large . Also,
pocket watches and
Call 61~·
I i
557·3411.
54

949· 216()

G'ene's Carpet Cleaning,
reasonable

rates,

scot·

cnquard. 992·6309 or 742·
2211 .
French City Painting .
Residential, commercial,
Interior,
exterior.
Specializing In Interior
painting, paper hanging a.
ceilings .

eBackhoe
• E•cavating

For all of your wir·
ing needs.
Let George Miller check

•Wilter, Sewer &amp; Gas
Lines
Licensed &amp; Bonded

your present electricat
system.
Residential
&amp; Commercial

nllmates.
7160.

307-778~

or 307·

5HP
TILLER

Farm_Buil~ings
Sizes
nFrqm l0x30"

SMALL

Utility Buildings
Sizes from 4X6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rl.l, Box 54
R1c1ne, oh.

Ph. 614-143·2591
6·15-tfc

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp;SERVICE
GAAVELY-W•Ik behind

CARPENTER
SERVICES"

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

&amp;

rldint lrutors, Push I nil-pro,
mowers .
·
SNAPPER - Pusft &amp; ull pro.
mowers, ridin9 tr•clon .
ATl.AS- Tillen
We' EO EllTE A- 8rush cutl•r &amp;
rrimmtn
§TIHl- Brut.h Cllllffl &amp; lrim ·

-Addons and
remOdeling

-Roofing and gutter
Need Roof Protecllon :
S.W.E .P.C.O. guaranteed
roof coatings for all roof
types . Full six (61 year
warranty, If opplled to
company specifications.
Also, products for protec·
ling asphalt paving ,
mesonry buildings and

ALLSTEEL

Call742·319S
or 992-7680
2·8·1fc

"YOUNGS

Free

PH. 992·2182
992·2606
992-7861
3·11 ·1 mo. pd .

MillER ELECTRIC
SERVICE

DUMP TRUCK
Ph. 992·7201
3-5-1 mo.

deep stream extraction.
Free
estimated,

Darrell Brewer

Windows
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992·2772
3·23·1 mo.

949·2862

Home

textured

Misc . Merchanlse

• Replacement

Free Estimiltes
~easonable Prices
Call Howard

Improvements

Antiques
ATTENT .ION :
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay casn "" certified check

• Storm Windows

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

work
-Concrete work
-Plumbing and
eltclric.al work
(Free Estim•tes)

BISSEll
SIDING CO.

1

"Beautiful, custom
Built Garages"
Calf for free siding
estimates, 949·1801 or

m•n
YAZOO- Hi·whHI mowers
Wt ser111ct WWhliiYft ltlll
Sm.lll Entlnu- Our Sp•ci•lty
U4 Condor St.
Pomeroy, Oh,
PH. "2·2f7S
1·.51 mo.

V.C. YOUNG II

992-6215 or 992-7)14

Pomeroy, Oh.

1

"Specializing In
Re-Roofing"
• Small Car.penter Jo.bs

• Insulation
• Storm Doors

eSeplic Syslems

··· · ~·.,· ·

53

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

new or repair gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and pc~inting.
All work guaranteed.

paid. Small trailers only.
Phone773·5651 .

Ph . 367·7560

ROOFING

All types ' of roof work,

scenic riverbank , Utilities

water·Sewer·E tectric
Gas Line-Ditcnes
Water Line Hook-ups
Septic Tanks
County Cer1ified
Roush Lane
Cheshire. Oh.

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

KEN SOLES
245-9113
2·19·1fc

5 passenger club
Private sleeping .rooms, 1977 Ford
Good condition. 949·
with cooking facilities, air wagon.
condlllonlno and cable tv . 2210.
773·5651 . •
1971 Chevy one half ton flat ·
bed, new tires, 6 cyflnder 1
46
Space for Rent
standard, good running
COUNTRY MO.BILE Home condition. 5395.00. Phone
Park, Route 33, North of 949·2181 .
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
992·7A79 .
74
Motorcycles
TRAILER spaces for rent. 1979 Yamaha XS750 Special
Southern Valley Mobile with low mileage, excellent
Home Park, cneshire. on. condition with ma~y ex·
lras. Call alter 4 p.m. at
992·39.54.
992-53411.
~,--'--------------Campsites for rent on

REESE sJg;V
TRENCHING
SERVICE

PWMBING
AND
HEATING

1980 Plymouth Horizon.
Take over payments. 992·
302S.

11

H lie

KAUFPS

DENNEY
CHAIN LINK
FENCE

steering, air cond., am·fm
radio, · cruise c:ontr0\ 1

fur·

Trash Pi&lt;:kup In
The Village of
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992·5016
or 992·7505
3·11 ·1 mo.

"

197S Maverick, 4 door, 6
cyl. 1975, Ford Landau, 4
door. power brakes, power

for Rent

J&amp;C
SANITATION
sERVICE

ARD

949-2160.

No Sunday Calls
3· 1l ·IIC

resurfacing concrete. Call

1-614·992-7603 after s p.m.

..

12

Plumbing
&amp; Heating
WATER
WELLS .

ROUSH.
CONSTRUCTION

Domestic and commercial I

POMEROY
LANDMARK
992·2111 .
~;--: Miin sl.
Pomeroy

Rutland

Fum~ure

Carpet

KITCHEN
CARPET

CARPET
lllt PADDIN

From

From

'7.99 &amp; up
Installed

12.95 &amp; up

1

Installed

Rheem, Amana
&amp; Carrier

AIR CONDITIONERS
&amp; HEAT PUMPS
Ph . 614-992-7031
3·11-1 mo.

2 Rolls
Rubber Back

SHAG
R, . Sl5.9!

$ 99 SQ.

Yd.

Cash·n·Carry

Buy Now &amp; Sa-ve S2·S6 Per Yard .
25 rolls carpet in stock to pick from.
Regular backed carpet installed free,
with pad.
Drive A Little- Save A Lot

· RUTlAND FURNITURE

Main St.

GAU.IA
REFRIGERATION
INC.

New Homes • ex·
tensive remodeling
• E lectrica 1 work
• Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Gre9 .Roush
Ph. 992·7583
3·24·1 mo.

pump sales and service.
Tom Lewis Drilling .
Seasonal discount on pum·
ps. 1·304·895·3802 or 1·304·
895·3641 :

Cash 'n' Carry

'The Deily Sentlnel

""A•nt•l Pro!Nrtltl
,.. Apt . .. OUII' Owntrs
"" Mobil• Home P•rks

'

71

.

Ph. Pomeroy
614-992·7038
J·IH mo.

"S,.Cill Alf•l For"

Rutland. 0~.

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

ntshed, air conditioning,
cable tv. 773·5651.
44
Apartment

bedroom

• Dllhwtsh•n

"' COin LIUnclrltl

Mortgage Bankers
992·7S44
VA Joans -

SPRING CARPO SALE

·~· .

• Dr~•n

CUNNINGHAM

S%

eHeatPumps
• Ele&lt;:trlc Heating
So Wiring
Industrial, Commercial
and Residential

•A•ngts
•HoiWIIItrT•nkl
Rtpalrlng Sine.''"

BULLS for , sale. Polled
Herefords. 1 12-2~ months
old. Phone 614·247·2704 or
614·247·2702.

Two tr ll i lers for rent, fur ·

one

ELECTRICAL CO.

63~__--..!L:.'Iv!!e!!i'!!toc~k'---­

yard . Three room apart·
men!. Utilities paid. 992 ·
59~9"" 992·9975.
'

Asking

.... .. IIIHIIIc- Stlllf ..

l~EIIJT!IIIIIn . US

located above ground at
Athens. Ohio. $3,000.00
each. Phone1·J0.4·422·278l.

with river frontllge, nice

apart·

$51,000.00.
WE HAVE OVER 80
'PROPERTIES
TO
CHOOSE FROM. Fl·
NANCJNG
AVAIL·
ABLE. OPEN 9·5 MON.·
SAT.
REALTOR
Henry E. Clelona, Jr.
"Hlt1
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trunell94f.2UG
Roger &amp; Dottle Turner
992·.5492
OFFICE "2-2259

CAkE·

.MOBILE HOME for rent. 64;::===;:;
Ha=y=&amp;;:::;:G=ra=ln===
Completely
furnished .
Hay for sale, 90 cents per
Ad~ Its preferred. Deposit.
bale. Can deliver. No Sun·
992·2749.
&lt;lay sales. 1143·2795 or 1143·
27a1 .
Mobile home, two bedroom

base·

suo 1lr- . . . . . , .

1110MJI Send now fo1 NEW 1981
SPRING·SUMMER PATT£RN CAT·
ALOG. 100 styiiS, f~~t pattern
coupon. &lt;12 Velul). Calli~$!.
IM-14 Qolcl ~ .. . . . 1.75

.

r

PARTS AND SERVICE
ALL MAkES
eWIIhtrs
eD IIpouls

SUPPUES

~NN'S

Ost&gt;orn Rd.
Reedsville, Oh.

61
Form Equipment
Kuker 400 gal. spray; Int.
540,4x1o" plows; M.F. 13.5'
Disc.; fer!. auger; 1 set
snap on 15.5x38 dual firM;
Dunham
w Harcigator;
N.H.
307 Manure
Spreder;
Int. tractor, 986. 304-675·

Call Ken Young

3 bedroom mobile home.
Approximately S miles COWS for sale. Bred and
from Pomeroy or Mid· open polled herefords. 614·
dleporl. 992·5858.
247·2704 or 614·247·2702.

and has 3

1lr ... ..... 1lr ... 1M

......
l'llllr1t-

DECORATING_

..,

Four 15,000 gallon tanks

For sale or rent : ap·
proximately ~ acre• with
three bedroom modular
home In Portland, Ohio
orea. Nine miles from the
Ravenswood bridge. Call
alter s p.m. at 1·304·273·
5272.

ment and a garage with

Wonted to Do

-lor people at ner home .

Has

some fruit trees. Would
consider land contract.
$11,200.00 .
BEAUTIFUl HOME
PlUS - This house's
beauty Is indescribable.
II Is situated on a big
level lot with large
shade trees, pretty

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

plumbing,

home.

"

.PACQUALE

APPLIANCE SERVICE

All WI

'

Used R·40 Ditch Witch
Trencher. 1-614·.~.-7842 .

Brown's

Trailer Court. Minersville.
992·3324.
'

New

S68.000.00.
NEW LISTING

REPAIR or remodeling
work, floors, doors. wall
paneling, ceiling , "" floor
tile, Sictlno. 992 ·2759.

only.

ntshed apartment with all
utllitiM pold. $225.00 mon·
th. Phone 992 ·3190.
45
Furnished Rooms
Sleeping rooms; bY the

of pasture at present, 1S
acres t illable, 2 houses
and several barns and
farm structures. Call
for
more
details .

Two

for Rent
2 bedroom Mobile Home.

-

ApproK. l!4 acre lot with
water tap. Nice trailer
or
building
$ite.

Township, close to St .
Rt. 33. Approx. 25 acres

I

--

&amp;

acre fllrm in Bedford

915-3809 .

work,

din ing

Heacfquart~'rs

dollars per cow per month.

II

room.

Housinq

excellent

for e. rent .

l'h

and extra large lot. Has
all uti I Illes, near
playground and pool.
Priced at $24,500.
LISTINGS NEEDED
NOW FOR SPRING
SALES. WANT YOURS
SOLD CALL "2-3176.

and experience. Phone 992·
3941.
•
pasture

home.

baths, liv ing room, din·

Phone
H614)·992·3325

20%.··~_0% OFI~III

..,.

'

MP TftiiAd tor Future Retar-..ce

·sALE

DECORATING
SUPPLIES

~

Adults

bedroom

children. Have references

HAVE vacancy . Care,
room. board a. laundry for
Invalid or elderly persons.
Reuonable. 992·6022.

Columbus, Ohio

r::::CI:*':•:-:'":· :::T.if;;~~~~~~;:;:::i

NEW LISTING - Nice 3

woman In my home . 667·

4
GIVHWIY
Female purebred Irish Set·
ter that has been spayed.
Free to good home . Almost
Bank, Executor of the 2 year old. 992·5135.
Estate of Nancv Reed
deceased, late of lhe City ol One ell black male, part
Parkersburg" · County of
end part schnau1er,
Wood, and otate of West terrier
Virginia , filed in this Courl and one black and while
an authenticated copy of female. Approximately 3
the iellers of their appinl· months old . Housebroken .
ment grllnted to them bv 992-loU.
Virginia . All creditors of
such decedent must file
their claims to thiS Court
witnln six months after tne
dale of such filing, or their
claims will be forever
barred a• a possible lien

H eadquarters

Will babysit In my home for
Infants or school age

This 131h day of Mar ch,
1981 .
E. F. Robinson
President
(31 17, 24, 31 , 3tc

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
.TRANSPORTATION

J·Jt&gt;

.IJIJL
~

h 'ousing

WILL lake care of elderly

Deceased
Case No. 2ll87

the County Commission of
Wood
County,
West

General

In field or shop. Locoted at
Maplewood Lake or call
949·2285 .

6675.

By order of the Board of
Public Affa irs.

-.........
,,

I

Business Services

--··__
····-.........
.....,,, .

u .

RHf Estolt

steels, casting, aluminum,

Limited located at S08S
NOTICE
Reed Road , Columbus,
all Creditors of said
Ohio 43220. upon payment To
Decedent:
of S15 .00 , NONE OF
Notice Is hereby given
WHICH WILL BE REF UN· that on the 26th day of Mar·
OED .
ch. 1981. the Wood County

Pulllic Notice

These cash rates
include discount

event more than fifty
thousand dollars, or a bond
tor ten percent of his lltid,
payable to the Director .

Announcem.nts

l

The estimated con ·
w•th Chapter 5525 Racine Gun Club, every
struction cost is $20 ,000 as · cordance
Friday night starting at
Ohio
Rev
ised
Code .
ofMay1,1981.
and specifications 7:30 p.m . Factory choke
A site visit is recom · arePlans
on file in the Depart- guns only .
mended and may be
of Transporation and
arranged by first con · ment
off ice of the Dislricl
tactin$1 Pomeroy Water the
Deputy Director.
YOUR
PIANO . Too
Super•ntendent Reid Will,
The Director reserves valufble to negle&lt;:l, expert
telephone 614· 992 ·3121 .
Th e ·
CONTRACT the right to reject any and tunino and repair. Lane
DOCUMENTS may be all bids. OAVIOL. WEIR Daniels, 742·2951 or 992·
examined at tne following
DIRECTOR 2082.
locations :
Rev.
8·17
·73
Board of Public Affairs,
Village Hal l, Pomeroy, Mar. 30, Apr. 6

I ~~~to0lA~~ESTc,r,YEN6~ Ohio45759
•
I WASHNINGTON .
Burgess and
Niple ,
I
MILES P. ESLICK Limited
, 5085 Reed Road,

1

Public Notice

Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training
as a young bust ness person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as e Sen·
llnel rout. carrier. Phone
us right away and get on
the tllglblllty list at 992·
2156 or 992·2157.

Misc. Mtrchlnlst
FIREWOOD. $30. load.
Split a. delivered. 992·5240.

SWIMMING POOLS IN·
STALLED: 1999.00. Com·
pany has pools left over
from lestvear. 16 x 31 o.d ...
15 x 24 swim area. Price In·
eludes pool; filter, deck,
bench, ladder, and In·
stallatlon on nor(l'lal
ground conditions. Also In·
ground pool kits starling at
11695.00. Bank flnanclno
available. Call collect at I ·
304·776·6333 or In OhiQ call
1·800·624·8511 .

older home with 6 rooms

must apply , on Contact Ed Burketi Barber
PROJECTS and they must theBidders
proper . forms, for Shop, Middleport.
be listed In the proposal . quat
iflcafion at least ten
submitted at the B I 0
days prior to the date set
opening.
tor openin~ bids in ac · RACINE GUN SHOOT,

Meigs, Monroe Mwgan,
Noble, Vin 1on and

7S1Auto Pllrls
&amp; Aeceuorlel

JJ- ,•rms lor Sll1t

Attorney for
Petitioners ·

Public Notice
WORK .
Each BIDDER must

ir.nprovernentsin :
Athens, Gaflia, Hocking,

74- Mot•rc.,clt~

tor hit

.

curb In fl a tl on.
p ay cas h f or

1 Wanted

u - Sud &amp; Ffr'iillur

ServiCft

and Show Cause why such
adjudication should not be
made, and why, if made,

JUDGE

~&gt;M-------------------- 1 122 N. Ravmond Road
I SPfH~e·F~~·~~~NG IN
1
1 g~~E~HJpy J~ TH:

be low

U - W•ntedto 8u,
72- Truch lor hit
•J- L•vntock
•~- H•v &amp; Gr•in

li - Homtslo rS• ftl
32- MobUe-Homn

•.

A1m1

9- WantedtoBuy

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

-·

eRENTAlS
41- Housestor Rtnt
•2- Mobllt Momt5
lor A tnt

2- ln Memon1m

Presented By :
Faye H. Oakes

I
I
Name---------- I
Address. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ I
I
I
I

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

'.

County Court·
house, 1116 West Broad ·
wav . in the
PresidinQ

~

PHONE 992-2156
,I

Spokane

has already been given or
is not reouired bv Law. and

WANT AD INFORMATION

Public Notice

the hour of 8:45A .M. at the all persons shall appear

1

being ROBERTA JANE
ERV IN nee HAYMAKER ,

Public Notice

tnat saict..child was barn the oepartment of the Superior the Petition herein should
9th . day of March, 1978.
Court or such ot her depart· ·not therelllfter be heard for ·
th~ith and the prayer or
A hearing for such pur· ment of the Superior Court
pose shall be had on the as the matter may be prayers theceof granted.
HARO D D. CLARKE
2Bth day ot April , 1981 , at transferred, at wh icl1 ':'1me

sent of the natural mather
of the above named.child as
to the adoption by the
custodial step-parent, suc h
natura l mother' s name

,-·--------~--------~·

J

Public Notice

Lots&amp; Aerugo
LAND for sale. Located on
170
acres
tillable.
985·~116.
acres,
Silver
Ridge, 60
11

~~~~~~~~~~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

pet. 1971 Comeron, 14 x 64,
two bedrooms, new carpet.
1972 Champion, 12 x60,two
bedrooms, new carpet. 1976
Cameron, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, all tltctrlc. 1971
Skyline, 12sx 61, two
bedrooms, bath &amp; •to, ,_
carpet . 1970 PMC,
12 x 60, two bedrooms, , _
carpet. B x S Sales, Inc.,
2nd x Viand Street, Point
Pleasant, WV Phone 675·
4424.
l5

seeking

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
-

Wanted to Buy: cleurlngs,
wedding bonds, anything
stomped, 10K, 14K, or IlK
gold. Sliver coins, pocket
watcheS .. Cell Joe Clark at
992·2054 at Clark's Jewelry
Store, Pomeroy, Ohio457~

,JT'N'~VLE~

j--------~--_;by;.=.:Lany=..:!.:W:.:;rfgh::::,' ~

742·2211

Excovollng
COMPLETE sever in·
stallalion &amp; bockhoe ser·
vice for Racine-Syracuse
sewer district. Dozer work
If needed. 949·229J.

13

Dozer work . Small
specialty. 742·2753.

jobs

a

Dllcher work. Gu·Water·
Eltctrlc Installed. 742·2t19
before 9:00p.m.

Eltcllrlcol
&amp; Refrlttrollon
SEWING·· MACHINE
Repairs, service, all
mekes1 992·2284. The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singor Sai11
and Service. we sharpen
Scissors.

.---------------.
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

GOING BALD?

I

Tl.RES GOING BALD?

I

W• hatt Flmtone 72h utd we

l

Can't help

~u.

I .can help.

:

I
I

I

I POMEROY HOME .. AU10 I
I Ph. "2·2094

3·23·1 mo I

L-------------J

14

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR - 5-tparo,
toeaters. lrona. all small
appliances. Lawn mower.
Next to State Highway
Garoge on Route 7, 9853825.

I
I
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I
I
I
I
I
I
I

TERM ITE aiMI
PEST CONTROL
Roaches,

Birds,

Rodents, Spiders.- Fleas,
Ants and other small in·
sect control.
FREE ESTIMATES
1 or 5 yur termite
guorontH
Loco led In Gallipolis
ph. " 4-446-:1101
3·27·1 mo.

�----·---- -

......

~ ~·

h.: Th• Pqmeroy Sentlnd

iddiPn,nrl . Ohio

Four. motorcyclists

die in Ohio wrecks
By'lbeAaoclaledPress
COLUMBUS - Edward Howell,
Four motorcyclists were among · Charlotte Burston, 30, Diane Woods,
the 16 people ltilled in traffic ac- 36, all of Columbus, in three-car accidents in Ohio over the weekend, cident on Ohio 40 in Franklin County,
the Highway Patrol said. The toll
ASHTABULA - Gregory Brenalao included three multipl~eath nem1an, 19, of Jefferson, and
smashups.
·
Gregory P. Gutzman, 24, Jefferson,
The patrol counts weekend traffic in a o e-car accident on Ohio 3!11 in
deaths from 6 p.m. Friday until mid- Ashtabula County.
night Sunday.
CINCINNATI - Richard G.
1'!Ml dead :
Crawford, :H, Harrison, in a motorSUNDAY
cycle accident on a county road in
NAPOLEON - Patricia A. Bald· Hamilton County.
win, 42, and Jaymie L. Zuver, 20,
AKRON - Timothy W. Thorp, 29,
both of West Unity, in a twt&gt;-ear Akron, in a ·one-car accident on Incollision on Ohio·34 in Henry County. terstate 77 in Swnmit County.
PORTSMOUTH - Jeffrey A.
LOGAN - Michael N. Craft, 23,
Loper, 12, of Portsmouth, when the Lancaster, when two motorcycles
motorcycle he was riding crashed collided with a car on a city street.
off Ohio 104 in Scioto County.
FRIDAY NIGIIT
SAnJRDAY
SANDUSKY - Carl W. Voltz, 34, of
fUU.SBORO - Terry E. Men· Sandusky, in a one-car crash on U.S.
denhall, 19, Leesburg, in a one-car 6 in Erie County.
accident on Centerlield Road in
ATHENS - Ninita Myers, 29,
Highland County.
Logan, in a one-c.a r crash on Ohio 93
BOWUNG GREEN - Sharon K. in Hocking County.
Williams, 24, Toledo, in a truck· • DAYTON - Joseph P. Dugan, 24,
motorcycle accident on Ohio 281 in of Columbus, in a one-car accident
Wood CoWitv.
on a Montgomery County road.

Meigs County happenings..
Couples get licenses
Marriage licenses were issued to
Roy Grayson Bareswilt, 20, Mid·
dleport and Anna Marie McKinney,
lll, Middleport; Wilkie Holman , 37,
Middleport, and Virginia Lu
Grogran, 51, Middleport.

Couple ends marriage
In Meigs County Conunon Pleas
Court the marriage of Michael Clark
Custer and Phyllis Ann Custer was
dissolved.

Patrol cites Pomeroy
man following mishap
AMeigs County man was cited in a
two-car accident SWldaY morning,
according to the Gallia-Meigs Post
of the Ohio Highway Patrol.
The patrol said Raymond E.
Myers, 61, Pomeroy, was turning
left onto CR 10 from CR 17 at 8:45
a.m. when his truck went left of center and collided with a car driven by
Philip Q. Blackwood, 28, Rt. 1,
Rutland.
Both vehicles suffered moderate
damage and Myers was cited for left
of center.
The patrol reported Thelma L.
Cordell, 26, Rt. 2, Bidwell, was not
4Jjured when her car struck and
killed a deer on SR 160 at 7:50.p.m.
Sunday. Her auto suffered minor
damage.

Faces check charges·
Robert Ray Allen, Mann, W. Va.,
was jailed in Middleport Saturday
afternoon on a bad check charge.
Allen using checks carrying a licticious Middleport address and
phone number began cashing checks
at Middleport business houses about
March 20. Total amount of checks
cashed at Middleport businesSes as
of Saturday totaled approximately
$2,000. He wlll appear in mayor's
court this week.
·

Veterans Memorial
Sunday Admissions-Hobart Day,
Coolville; Wallace HaUield ll,
Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges-William Bar·
ber, Jr., JoAnn Conkle.

Youth faces
(Continued from page 1)
The vehicle was found in a ditch
on coWity road 28 near the Dory
Wolfe residence. It is believed that
the car caught on fire while the
driver was attempting to get out of
the ditch or was set on lire. The
vehicle was destroyed.
Bobby Porter, Racine, was
traveling west on SR. 7 at Rock
Springs Saturday morning when his
1975 station wagon caught fire .
The Pomeroy Fire Department
was called to the scene. The fuel line
connector hose and wiring was
damaged.

Area deaths

1Sentinel classifieds

Goldie Wyant Lynch

He was a retired truck driver for
theTownofNewHaven.
Mrs. Goldie Wyant Lynch, 69,
Surviving
his wife, Doretha
Route I, Athens, died Saturday at Mattox Thornton; four daughters,
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Helen G. Lyons, Disa Louise Roush,
Mrs. Lynch was a daughter of the both of Letart, Lona May Morrison,
late Nick and Laura Price Hunt. She Middleport, Ohio, and Judy R.
was also preceded in death by her Spencer, Racine ; one son, Uoyd M.
first husband, Leroy Wyant, four Thornton, Letart; a sister, Bessie
brother.i and a siater.
Herdman, Letart; one brother,
Surviving are her husband, Carlos Charles, Point Pleasant; 23 grandW. Lynch ; a son, Kenneth C. Wyant, children and one great-grandchild.
Pomeroy; six daughters, Mrs. NorFWieral services will be conman (Jean) Wood, Mrs. Luther ducted Tuesday, I p.m., at the
(Veneva) Gilliam, Mrs. Dallas Foglesong FWieral Home with the
(Janice) DeBord, all of Pomeroy; Rev. Hennan Jordan officiating.
Mrs. Stanley (Juanita ) Beal, Burial will follow in the Bethel
Cleveland; Mrs. James (Mary) Cemetery near Leon.
Haning, Albany, and Mrs. Harold
Friends may call at the funeral
(Judy ) Gilliam, Zanesville; four home today, 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
steil'lons, Raymond Lynch, New
Orleans; Lee Lynch, . Copley ;
Rolland Lynch, Cleveland; Allan
Lynch, Phoenix, Ariz.; two sisters, 'Robert F. Mees
Mrs. Matilda Rowley, Pomeroy, and
Robert F . M!!e8, 61, formerly of
Mrs. Myrtle Wolfe, Ravenswood ;
five brothers, Ben Hunt, Akron; Roy Porileroy, died Sunday at his home
Hunt, Hollywood, Fla.; Orville HWlt, at 218 N. Murry Hill Road, ColumGainesville, Ga.; George HWlt, bus.
Mr. Mees was a son of the late
Point Pleasant, W. Va. , and Horton
Floyd F . and Mabelle Ebersbach
Hunt, Charleston.
Also surviving are 18 grand· Mees. Pomeroy.
Surviving are his wife, Betty Ward
children and nine great Mees, also a fanner Pomeroy
grandchildren.
· FWieral services will be held at 1 ·resident ; a son and daughter-in-law,
p.m. Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral Michael an!! Lorraine Mees,
Home with the Rev. Freeland Norris Modesto, Calif.; two grandchildren ,
officiating. Burial will be in the Eric and Jennifer Mees, Modesto;
Letart Falls Cemetery. Frienda may two sisters, Mrs. Charles (Charlotcall at the fWieral home from 2 to • te ) Evans, Pomeroy, and Mrs.
Vivian Williams, Columbus, and
and 7 to 9 p.m. today.
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held at 10
Addison Thomton
a.m.
Wednesday at the Trinity
Addison Thornton , 65, Letart, died
Church in Columbus with
Episcopal
Saturday in Pleasant Valley
the
Rev.
Robert
Leake and the Rev,
HospitaL
William
Brittman
officiating. FrienBol'l\ May 9, 1915, in Leon, he was
ds
may
call
at
the Schoedinger
the son of the late Melvin M. and
Hilltop
Chapel,
3030
W. Broad St.,
Cora F. Anderson Thornton.
Columbus, train 7 to 9 p.m. Monday
and Tuesday evenings. The body wiU
be brought to tile Ewing Funeral
Home in. Pomeroy where friends
may caU from 2 to 3 p.m. · Wednesday. Burial in Beech Grove
Five emergency calls were anFWieral
Home will foUow the
swered by local units over the
weekend, the Meigs Emergency
Medical Services reports.
On Saturdl!y at 1:28 p.m., the
Racine Unit took Clarence Proffitt
from Portland · to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; the Syracuse
Unit at 10:« a.m., tOOk Connie Kiser
from Racine to Veterans Memorial
and at 11:06 a.m., the Rutland Unit
tOOk Violet Jarrell, Salem Center
area, to Holzer Medical Center.

are

Sale Starts TodaJ

t;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;llliiiiii;;iiiiiiiiiiiiii
II

ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE

Good thru April 5, 1981
While Quantities last. Quantity rights reserved.
We are not responsible lor typographlcol er·
rors~ Sorry, No dealers .

ES

TOP QUALITY
AT LOW PRICIS
~PET
'395 Sci·

RUBBERBACK
From Only

.

j\rt 6J9ine, .,

CROSSIII SillS.

JUTEBACK CARPET

OLD COUITRY _WIIDIILL

'1295

From Only
Sq. Yd.
Installed w/pad

89c

PAnO TURF
Only

NELSON'S RIG.

Lawn &amp; garden omamenl
t;~~ ~\ stands 11" tall.

$'1"19

stake.

'9900

6' X 9'
CARPET RUGS

Windmill st&amp;nds 12" high and
· comes with a 13" GroundStake.
Adds a bright spot to Lawn and
shrubs.

.,,,.

NILSON'S 110.

~-

-·

----

Mhanic St.-Pomeroy

·were

Aasorted Flguraa

Prices

······· $199

•••

~~

10 CLOTHESPIIS

•12 Egga
•FUI 'n Thrill

FIE&amp;r&amp; ·

,••••••
'241

NILIOH'I 1110. t1.1t

MEAT SPECIALS

Cener Cut

111&gt; lb. Tastee Treet

LOIN

BOLOGNA

•10WH

.COOliE BIR
\-:

..,..
•ttl
I

•Chocolate
Chunk
•Brownie Bar
1-3/ 8 Oz.

.

'149

'1791,~.
GROCIRY BARGAINS
13 oz. Carnation

EVAPORATED
MILK

EIJI(M

MACARONI

...

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Your Community Owned Bank .
•

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29

SALMON

81'
no.

'1"

NILSON'S

. GAL.

89~

DOG

Family Size PUR EX

4/'1

'

IIIII RABBIT

22 oz.

DETERGENT

•la'nda
. every wov

WINDEX

'319

0

you

'129

n ...

CARROTS

3 ~~b~s

Kraft American &amp; Pimento

l-Ib. Nu-Maid Tumblers
Memb~r

FDIC

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SHELF LIIER
NILSON'S
' RIG, n ...

CHEF BOY -AR-_DEE
PIZZI IIIIC SAUCE

PIZZI Ill

can

•Spread

•Cheese

Imagine

only

•11"Tall

on

bread lor
· quick pizza
•Pepperoni
•sausage

12 Oz.
3 LB. BAG RED or
GOI.DEN DEl.ICIOUS

APPLES

99•

NILSON'S RIG.
NILSON'S .

110•• ,.,..

n.H

1SO..

69'

NILSON'S RIO. It'

SPI-nll IEIT BILLS
•15 Oz.

.
•

NILIOH'IIIIO.

PRODUCI

CELERY
39~stalk

NILSON'S IlliG. "'

.....

WHEAT

15 oz. Jo Bo

DAIRY

Farmers
Bank

15 '12 oz.
Libby's
Pink

2 lb. 'Del Monte

STATE

no. "'

•Qu•rt
•Lionlt S Qtl.

BliSS

BACON

Center Cut

NILSON'S

OSTER

Superior 12 ~z .

HAM

NILSON'S
REG. S17.H

PLASTIC

Good March 30· Apr114

BOIL!D

. $1 ·399

NILSON'S RIG. $2...

Not responsible for typog ..aphlcal errors

BLEACH

designed and manuiactured for ease ot
handling and maximum durability. II Is
light, strong, long lasting and will not rust.
Frame le rigid t" aluminum. Wheels are
made ot copolymer.
"Made In -America" by Domestic Industria

ElSTER EllS

Holding
Down

Sunday at 10:33 p.m. the Tuppers
Plains Unit tOOk Harold Smith,
County Road 9, to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 6:05 a.m.
Sunday, the Pomeroy Unit took
Neva Moore from 305 Spring Ave. to
Veterans Memorial.

CLOROX

#2500

lf//1('(

This sturdy, all aluminum trash toter was

ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE

visitationpe~ri~od~.;;:=----_j~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

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

.

FOLDING WIRE FENCE

Emergency runs

/99~

·-

//( 1;/:.

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I

'3500

n.1•

slake-In Crossing
Sl!]ns, In lull color. From

C.Jte,

weather • rnlstant ~niMo
Complete with

On~

TRASH TOTER

I

*495 Sq. yd.

From Only

ADJUSTABLE ILUIIIUI

1111 RAVIOLI
•15 Oz.

58'

YOUR CHOICI

79~
Per Roll '
NILSON'S 110, t1,11

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