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                  <text>Page-16

The Daily sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, Apt111S,1981

IMeigs County happenings I No progress made to end coal ·strike
Correction

To end marriages
..

Christy Caldwell was granted a
one year teaching contract in the
Southern Local School District Mondliy nigh) rather than Christy Powell
as reported earlier.

Two divorces both charging gross
neglect of duty and extreme cruelty
have been granted in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court: Sara
M. Seyler, Middleport, was granted
a divorce from Richard D. Seyler II,
Pomeroy, and Dennis Satterfield,
MinersviUe Route I, from Robin
Denise Satterfield, Syracuse.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted--Tony Stephen ,
Pomeroy; Patricia Cleland,
Langsville; Chad Pope, Middleport ;
Richard Rathburn, Middleport.
Discharged--Jackie Brannon,
Lone Tisdale, Judith Crow, Richard
DeMoss, Odell Blake, Callie
Metheny, Paul Schuler and Chad
Pope.

Plan potluck dinner
Hemlock Grange will hold a
potluck dinner at 6 p.m. Friday at
the hall.

Couples will wed
: Randy E. Houdashelt, 21,
P.omeroy, and Teresa Lynn VanMeter, 21, Rutland.
ponald Eugene Casto, 23, Minersville, and Traci Denise Weese, 21,
Cheshire.

Probe minor wrecks
Two trucks received moderate
damages as the result of a hit-skip
accident on the upper parking lot in
Pomeroy Tuesday.
Pomeroy Police said a car hit a
truck owned by James Bailey and
the Bailey truck was shoved into a
second truck. Police said that an
arrest is expected.
Police also reported that several
arrests are expected as the result of
a front window being shot out of the
Elberfeld Department Store late
Monday night.lnvestigation of the
incident is continuing.

:Commissioners
iContinued from page I 1
about $12,000 additional funds added
to his ,budget for the current year.
During the discussion , Commissioner Henry Wells said-he has
mentioned several times about putting a ,tax levy on the ballot in order
to provide moneys for higher
salaries for deputies.
Sheriff Proffitt stated that this
would not keep his deputies from
walking out because they need financial help now.

WASHINGTON (AP) ..:.. Efforta to
end the 21Mlay coal strike are
stalled, with negotiators for the
nation's soft~oal industry and the
United Mine Worllers trading
charges on who is to blame for the
latest deadlock.
Union and industry bargainers
met for about five hours Tuesday,
but ended the talks with both sides
reporting no progress. UMW
President Sam Church said the
union had made proposals but said

faced wanton endangerment
charges on warrants blken out by
Bates, pollee said.
,
Tuesday's session was the first at- ·
tempt to tesolve the cllspute that
sent some 160,000 coal miners to the
picket lines on March 'tl.
Officials had predicted the strike
would be . a short one, since
negotiators agreed upon a threeyear contract calling for a 36 percent
increase in wages and benefits. But
miners voted down the pact by a 2-

u~ttmg e m&lt;iH I

·--TO
BUSI=rDUSTRY,
AND THE . · SSIONS

·

BANK ONE OF POMEROY. NA

614/992·2133

ELBER.FELDS

Arm Rugs

School area.

enttne
1Section , 14 Page~
lS Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, April16, 1981

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
President pardons officials
WASIDNGTON - One of two fonner FBI officials pardoned by
President Reagan for authorizing illegal break-ins during·a probe ·of
anti-war radicals in the early 1970s. says he owes one to the Gipper.
And, he says, so does the entire U.S. intelligence corrununlty.
.
Reagan announced unconditional pardons Wednesday for W. Mark
Felt, 67, once the FBI's No. 2 official, and Edward S. Miller, 57,
onetime head of th.e bureau's intelligence division. Both men said they
felt vindicated.

Child addict didn 't exist
WASIDNGTON - The Washington Post, calling itself "the victim of
a hoax," publicly apologized today for printing a fabricated story
about an 8-year-old heroin addict that won a Pulitzer Prize, journalism's highest honor.
Reporter Janet Cooke relinquished her $1,000 Pulitzer Prize for
featur~ writing and resigned from the newspaper Wednesday after admitting to her editors that her story was acomposite and the child ad·
dict she described and quoted did nor exist.
.

Crews continue rescue effort

Monroe Radial-Matic®and
Monro-Magnunr&amp;O ·
Shock Ahsorliers on sale.

JU!;DSTONE, Colo. - Rescue crews inched their way along a 7,:roo
foot sloping mine shaft early today, trying to reach IS miners trapped
by an exploSion that swept through the lower limits of the Dutch Creek
No. 1coal mine on Colorado's Western Slope.
Seven men came out of the mine in two groups after the blast Wednesday afternoon. Four were uninjured, but three were admitted to
Valley View Hospital in Glenwood Springs for treatment of burns,
bruises and shock, officials said.
·

~

&lt;1

Winni14g Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The winning number selected Wednesday night in
the Ohio Ulttery's daily game "The Number" was 691.
The lottery reported earnings of $771,593 from the money wagered
on the drawing. Lottery officials said sales were $989,164.50. Holders of
wiru1ing tickets are entitled to share $217,571 .50.

Adeal you can't top. Buy one, get the second haU price.
Come In and lake advantage of
!his great oiler. Buy one Monroe
Radial- Malic~ Shock Absorber.
our lop-of-lhe·line car shock ...
or one Monro-Magnum• 60
Shock Absorber. our top

llghllruck shocl:. cmd gel.lhe
second one h?ll .AI. That's a 50 ·
percent savings on the second
shock. But hurry. Oiler good lor a
limited lime only

Weather
Cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstonns tonight and
Friday. Lows tonight around 50. High! Friday 7().75. Chance of rain 50
percent tonight and 60 percent Friday. Winds southerly to southwesterly around 10 mph tonight.
Extended Ohio Forecut- Saturday through Monday: Chance of
silowers and thWJderstonns each day. Highs in the mid to upper 60s
north to mid to upper 70s sOuth. Lows in the 50s Saturday and in the
mid-40s north to mid-liels south Sunday and Monday.

POMEROY HOME &amp;AUTO

Amtrru send s lo~ e ··

Pomeroy , On.

Ph . "1·10Jtor ••1 ·511r

Please phone 992-2651 or 992-5627

•

at y

Vol.30, No.1
1
Copyri,hled 1981

their incomes, the report said.
Reagan's statement took note of
other alternative tax proposals now
before the Congress but said that
"compared to our proposals, they
will result in higher taxes for the
American people."
Reagan is proposing a three-year
cut in income tax rates of 30 percent.
Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, O.IU.,
chairman of the tax-writing House
Ways and Means Committee,
recommended a one-year tax cut
that would not be as costly as the
president's plan.

YOU'Ll FIND YOUR CORRECT SiZE, TOOl

IN Buntrn"' llvt .

REWARD

•

$5.3 · billion in cuts by the administration. The budget office said
it was unable to estimate the effect
of $10.1 billion in proposed cuts in
Medicaid, Social Security and other
programs.
The 20 million to 24 million people
are 51 percent of an estimated 16.5
million families with incomes below
ISO percent of the goverrunent's official poverty line, $6,570 for a
famlly of three and $8,410 for a
famlly of four. Most would lose only
a little, but 4 percent of the total
would lose as much as 16 percent of

'

POMEROY
R.OWER SHOP
~Nat

when he delivers his first broadcast position in the Democraticmesaage sin~ the assassination at- controlled House.
tempt.
'
The Washington Post reported
A radio or television broadcast is todily that a new study by the
possible, perhaps as early as the end Congressional Budget Office
of neXt week, the aides say. Another estimates the president's proposed
possibility is a nationally televised budget cuts in four programs alone
appeal for his economic program on . would mean less after-tax income
April 'tl, a·date that would coincide for 20 million to 24 million people.
with the end of a twl)oweek would says In a report comcongressional recess.
missioned by two prominent opReagan's written statement Wed- ponents of the president
nesday appeared designed to prod
Those four programs - welfare,
Congress into approving his tax cut school lunches, public service jobs
plan, which lu!s run into stronR OJ&gt;" and food stamps - are targeted for

COLORS. JUST THE FINISHING TOUCH FOR YOUR LIVING
ROOM, BEDROOM, PLAYROOM, KITCHEN; DEN.

Permanent Memorial Flowers

·· r11t

more )ln!dlctable and painful tax increase," he said.
·.The one-page statemelt was
iBilued BB Reagan continued his
recuperation in the White House
living quarters from a bullet woWJd
inflicted tn an assassination attempt
March 30.
Other adminlstratioo officials,
primarily Vice President 'George
Bush, have been substituting for
Reagan at appearances he might or~rily be making to pitch for his
eConomic program.
Aides say Reagan almost .certainiy will focus on his program

STOP .IN AND SEE THE NEW DESIGNS I"" DECOlA 1'01

Cut Flower Arrangements

Lost Sunday morning at Rock Springs in the Meigs High

WASHI~GTON (AP) - President
Reagan, lieginning to re-emerge 8a
chief fighier fOr his economic
program, insists that congressional
alternatives to his embattled threeyear tax cut plan ''are not the answer, they are the problem."
·
"Taxes are much too high to deal .
in half-measures," a convalescing
president said in a written statemelt
issued Wedmisday, the deadline for
filing personal income tax returns.
" I ask aU AIDericans io join me in
changing our tax syStem so that next
Aprill5 we shall begin to celebrate
tax reductions instead of simply one

HOME FURNISHINGS DEPT. 1ST FLOOR

LILIES- MUMS
AZALEAS - CORSAGES

MALE SCHNAUZER, answers to name of Shultz,
dark grey.

AlternatiVes not answer-·Reagan

e

~mar l

LOST

'

NEW SHIPMENT

prosecutor answering in ' the
negative.
Later Tuesday evening, a
delegation of members from various
work unions in the county met with
the board and asked to have the
situation of the striking deputies explain and requested that the board of
commissioners ratify the contract.
Commissioners spoke on the financial condition of the county and
stated that the board could not a]}propriate additional funds to the
sheriff's department because the
Commissioner David Koblentz total amount certified by the county
aske d Sheri ff Prof£itt the budget commission at the beginning
possibilities of laying off two people of the year had been appropriated.
so that salaries of the others could be
Commissioners, however, did tell
increased. Sheriff Proffitt replied the group that they will continued to
that he does not have enough men study the matter and apparently
now and could not lay anyone off.
were to reexamine the situation ,--- - - - - - - - - ---1
Koblentz also asked it if could be today with the county's budget comclarified as to whom the employes mission.
Make Sume J;unny llappy.
are striking against. Prosecutor
' At Tuesday's meeting, the
Crow said that legally the strike was negotiating team wo on the strike by
against the sheriff but the employes county highway department
are saying they are striking against workers reported that no movement
the commissioners.
has been reported and that it is the
The sheriff said he has gone as far intention of the team to stand firm
as he can and it is now the problem on its last offer.
of the commissioners and citizens of
County Engineer Philip Roberta
the county. He further stated that if O:Oet w1th the board to discussion
the board does not come up with the drainage problems on Middleport
money, then the consequences must Hill and he will look further into
be faced.
possible solutions of thooe problems.
Give F rowers for Easter, April19
Commissioner Jones said it is his
Wednesday, May 6, was declared
understanding that if the contract 1'1ursing Home Residents Day and
11 1 u h~K~u l o!~l ...,u ~ 10 1preu rl •omr t u• l~!l 10 '
lio lodu,
o•
11
agreement the sheriff signed ex- Betty Hobstetter, clerk of the Meigs
•, 011 ;, g 1ev&lt;&gt; p lu" ' w., run dol l • ~" ' l ln~ Nh lfll! '"
ceeds the sheriff's appropriations, it county Court, was granted per'~ '' 0 ,.10 01 ulmo1 1 un ywher co "' rh01 .. ()ri. l )o &lt;ull
0' &lt;O'"" tJ r , 00 n A.nd be u
bunny
would be considered an illegal con- mission to attend a meeting of the
tract. He asked Prosecutor Crow if Ohio Association of Municipal Court
Spring Blossoms
he would advise the board to ratify Clerks to be held in Columbus, May
For Someone You Lave
an illegal contract with the 11-13.
ltt~rl •h l)n"l

--~,..

r~(O.=l~ma=rg:in:·===::::===~===~~====~==:::::::::::~=:::::;

we
them.""rejected everything
the gave
industry
B.R. Brown, chief negotiator for
!he Bitumin&lt;lUS Coal Operators
Association, refused to diacuss the
substance of the talks. In a formal
statement iBBued later, however, the
industry group complained the union
had attempted to reopen several
issues that Previously had been
agreed upon.
"The BCOA flatly rejected the
union's position, which continues to
renect a serious lack of bargaining ·
discipline on the union's part," the
association said.
· Talks are scheduled to resume
Friday, and the UMW's Church
said: "We will 'give them a revised
package ... and go frol!l there." 1
There was no inunediate word on
what changes the union would make.
Meanwhile, there were new reports of violence in the coaHields.
In Kentucky, authorities said
Tuesday that a UMW official was
shot when coal trucks crossing
picket lines were pelted with rocks
at a non-union mine, Officials said
Billy Gene Looney, 34, of ('layking,
Ky., a representative from the UMW
District 30 · headquarters, was
treated at a hospital for a bullet
wound in the thigh and released.
Police said the incident was
triggered Monday when pickets
threw rocks at a truck driven by
Bobby C. Bates, 40, of Whitesburg.
"The driver apparently shot out cl
the vehicle," said stale policeman
Ronnie Wardrip.
Bates was charged with firstdegree assault and first-degree wanton endangennent, while Looney
and Jerry Puckett of Jenkins, both
of whom were on the picket line, also

~eno l

..,BANK ONE . . --..,.

'

606 e. Main
Ph. 992-2094
Pomeroy, Ohio
Front End Alignment-512.50 Most Passenger Cars

we •cept •II m• 1or crH1f urd•,
1nd wt w •re
!low ers
•~ervw nt rt

EYECATCHER- The home of Mr. and Mrs. FrankUn Rizer, E.
Mala SL, Pomeroy, Is probably the most extensively decorated home in
the Big Bend area for the Easter season. The scene features many colol'

lui Easter animals and accessories. Mr. and Mrs. Rizer have no small
children at home but do the extensive decorating for tbe delight of the
many children who do pass their home each day.

Strike restraining order continues
An informal discussion on a temporary restraining order dealing
with picketing of striking county
highway employes at the Meigs
County Landfill replaced' ~ hearing
on the matter in the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court Thursday
morning.
Judge John C. Bacon, common
pleas court; Rick Crow, county
prosecutor, representing the county,
and attorney Doug Little met in the ·
judge's chambers at which time it
was agreed to continue a temporary
restraining order for 14 days against
the picketing at the landfill.
The employes through their at-

tomey and union indicated they of Local lOBO, consent to or will offer
have no objections to continuing the no opposition to the continuance of a
temporary restraining order temporary restraining order and-or
thereby dissolving the need for a the granting of the preliminary inhearing on the matter.
junction preventing picketing of the
The employes and union issued the Meigs County Landfill site as sought
following statement following the in- by the Meigs County Commissioners
formal agreement:
in the complaint.

Meigs County and, as a result , will
not continue." .
Judge Bacon said no testimony
was taken on the granting of a
preliminary in junction since it was
agreed that the temporary
restraining order would continue for
14 days.

"The American Federation of
" It is hoped that this action will
State, County and Municipal Em- relieve tensions which exist between
ployes, The American Federation of the union and commissioners and
State, County and Municipal Em- will expedite resumption of
ployes, Ohio Council B, and the negotiations and lead to a speedy
Meigs Lvunty Highway Department resolution of the strike.
Employes, Chapter LOcal 1080,
"The union feels pi cketing the lanalong with the individual members dfill is not in the best interests of

County htghway department
workers have been on strike for over
two weeks and were picketing at
both the county highway garage and
the couhty landfill until the temporary restraining order prohibiting
picketing at the landfill was issoed
by Judge Bacon last Thursday.

Operators may form own negotiating team
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (APl - A
new association of independent coal
operators will mobilize a negotiating
team of its own next week if the
Bituminous Coal Operators
Association and United Mine
Workers fail to break deadlocked
talks, the group's organizer says.
"We want to let it be known that
we're not satisfied with these on-

again, off-again negotiations," said
Jack Henry, organizer of the
Unionized Coal Employers
Association and president of
Charleston-based Riverside Industries Inc.
In the coalfields Wednesday,
violence was reported in West
Virginia and coal trucks were
showered with rocks in Kentucky.

Two Philpott Coal Corp. guards
were arrested on charges of firing at
two UMW officials outside the
·union's District 29 headquarters at
Beckley, authorities said. Two
shotguns and ammunition were confiscated.
Kentucky state police said rocks
were thrown at coal trucks passing a
group of about 50 pickets near

KRISTIN ANDERSON

PAMELA CROOKS

Pikeville. No injuries or arrests
were reported.
The union's 160,000 members have
been on strike for 22 days , and have
rejected one proposed agreement by
better than a 2-1 margin . Talks are
scheduled to resume Friday in
Washington, D.C. Negotiations started anew Tuesday but were recessed

'

Auxiliary units
name ·delegates
to girls' state

WE HAVE MOVED
EFFEOIVE MONDAY APRIL 13, 1981

Delegates and alternates to
Buckeye Girls State, the American
legion Auxiliary's amual workshop
in democracy, have been selected by
the auxiliary units of Drew Webster
Post 39, Pomeroy, Feeney·BeMett
Post 128, Middleport, and ~cine
'Post 602, Racine.
Buckeye Girls State will be held at
Aahland College, Aahland, Ohio,
June 13-20. '
An orientation tea for the
delesates, alternates and their
parents has been iet for Aprll26 at
I :30 p.m. at the MI. Moriah Baptiat
Orurch Ill MJM!epnrt. The tea will
be~ llr -ben of the lewill
11an11J ht 1$3 Auillary ahd Mn.
Marpnt Orlke, director clgovernment· lor Girls state, will be the
apeaker. Deleptes ~ :
Southern High School: Rita Sloter,
dlughter of Marion Sloter of Racine.
Melp High School: Krlltin Andenon, dlugllter of Mr' and Mrs.
.William Anclei'IOII; Pamell
dlucJ!Ier of Mr. and Mrs, Edward
Crocib, Mlddllport;
Duoa-,
dlu&amp;l*r of Mr. and Mnl. 'nlo!llu
Dallller, Middleport; Melanie
Dillard, dlugiUr of Mr. and Mn.
Ropr F. Dillard, Pomeroy; Timmy

, OUR NEW ADDRESS WILL BE:

555 PARK ST., MIDDLEPORT

NEW
'

*
STORE HOURS: Monday thru Friday
LOCATION
7:00 a.m. til 5:00 p.m.
Saturday 7:00 a.m. til 3:00 p.m.
PHONE 992-6611 or 992-2709
WATCH FOR GRAND OPENING SPECIALS!

I
-- ,I

L

J&gt;

;v
;l!;

"'
~

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;SU·PPLY

eroou,

s-n

PARK ST., MIDDUPORT, OHIO
•'

j

----~----~,--~-----~------

--t

Eichinger, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Eichinger, Pomeroy; and
Laura Smith, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Oacar Smith, Route 2,
Pomeroy.
RITA SLOTER is sponsored by the
American legion Auxiliary cl
Racine POll! 802, Racine. A junior ill
Southern High School, she )s a member of the French Club and the
National Hoaor Society. She. is a
member of the Fint Baptl8t ChurcH
of Racine and active with the Baptiat
Youth FellOWihip there.
.
KRISTIN ANDERSON Ia e&amp;apOIIIIOI'ed by the Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter of Beta Slpna Pli
SororUy and the American Legion
Alllill8ry of F-y B1 olltt· Pelt
Ia, Mldd1eport. At ..... lfl&amp;b
School she playa vlll'litJ bubtbiD
and IIIII the liris' tradE IAIIm. She II
aleoa member of the NatiOMI Hlllor
Society, 11 aetitt 1111be jllllior JII'GIII
ccmmltlee lhil yell', IIIII in the .
World Affairl Club. She bu
been dve tluqb the,_. in 4-H
IIGit and u
of the
Meip 4-H Pltuure Rldn llld 1111
llWI'' In the Meip Ridlll&amp;
Clab IIIII the Ohio Valley Hone
(Continued oo pqe 101

il'
RJTASLOTER

a

PI'*"""

4-

I

MELANIE DILLARD

TAMMY EICHINGER

'

UURASM1111
~

SHERRY BEEGLE

�- ..
The Daily Sentinel- Page-3

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

,:C ommentary

Driessen powers Red sweep

Page-2-The Dilly Sent1ne1
Pomeroy-Middleport, Oliio ·
Thursday, April16,1981

&gt;The small arms control act of 198..L..1____w._.t_liam_R_.B_uc,.--kleY~·-=.:. :.I,.~
· Friends whose reasonsing and receive these w~apons during the populated by young' people. The
emotions are highly esteemed have month of September. A schedule of reason for this is that a liquor store
.. . asked that I reconsider my position values would be pOsted so that selling beer to a minor stands to lose
. l'' · on gun control, and these words are everyone turning in a gun would be something of substantial value, .
reimbursed such sums as1are listed namely its liquor license. Marijuana
1
written to honor that request.
1
on
the same kind of sc...ectule' one salesmen don't have expensive
Let us, instead of rehearsing the
·
consults
to ascertain the ••alue of a overheads, and so are not easily
usual arguments, inquire into what
,
punished. If by the end of September
actually would happen if gun control used car.
3) Anyone caught in the f105Si!ssion something on the order of explicit,
were to go into effect. Specifically, a
law that required owners of han· of a pistol after Oct. 1, 19811would be · massive resistance to SACA were to
dguns to turn these in. Let us assume ,sentenced to spend one ye/ir in jaiL consolidate, the act would be dead.
Let us, however, assume that the'
a law as sensible as we can conceive SACA would provide for no ex·
ceptions
to
this
rule.
American
people decided that, after
it. Call it the Small Arms Control Act
What
would
happen?
all,
the
law
is the law; decided, in
of 1961 ...
To begin with, something on tbe overwhelming nwnbers, to comply.
1) SACA begins by making ex·
ceptions. Uce~es to own and carry order of a national debat~ on the Let us go so far as to say that 90 perpistols will be granted to persons issue of compliance. It is generally cent of all handguns were turned in.
That would leave 5 million illegal
whose professions logically suppose accepted that if non~ompliance is
I,,
endemic,
prosecutions
are
at
best
handguns.
that they be armed. The Secret Ser·
During the ensuing year, let ·us
vice, the FBI, policemen, Brinks erratic, There are laws in most
'' guards
states
against
the
purveying
of
suppose
that 1,000 prosecutions of
- that, substantially, would
marijuana. As much is true for persons caught possessing a hanbe it.
2) Non-license holders would be heroin and other drugs. Marijuana is dgun were initiated and let us suprequired to turn in ·their handguns by not much more ·difficult to obtain pose, just to suppose, that all of them
- let us say - Oct. 1, 1981. Federal than beer. In fact it is said to be proved successfuL So, 1,000 people
buildings would be designated to easier to purchase in areas thickly go to jail, generating enormous
publicity, and we have arrived at '
Oct. 2, 1962. The president goes on
television and announces that he will
grant a general amnesty to all
Americans who did not turn in their
111 r llllrt Strt·1·t
handgllflS as required under SACA
Pumt'rti\, Uhin
an amnesty that will extend
Gl&lt;l-t!i-2 156
' .
IJE\ liTEIJ Tll THE INTEIU;ST OF THE i\I EIGS·MASll N AHF:A
through
the month of October, ex·
''
piring on Nov. I. Asulky line of men
and women fo.nns the next day outside the federal office, and during
the next three weeks t~ion
guns
are turned in.
ROBERT L. WINGETI
That
leaves two million still in
Publislwr
illegal hands.
·
PAT WHITEHEAD
BOB HOEFLICH
I should think that the figures,
given the scenario, would be in·
stantly reassuring at the .level of
handgun crime of the domestic
DALE ROTHG EB, JR.
variety. Fewer husbands would be

shot by Irate wives, and fewer wives given birth to a slowly gestating
ethos. An example would ·be the
by irate hwbands.
Would fewer norHtomestic crimes . strides made . during the past 40
years in arresting anti-Semitism.
aided by handguns occur?
It isn~t easy to say. Probably not at There came a point where it wasn't
the level of assassinations. Gov. accepted.
Avery prominent New Yorker told
George Wallace, asked·for his views,
said last week in his best anti-pointy· me awhile ago that he would leave
head prose that a man willing to suf- the room 'if such a remark as was
fer the consequences of an at- routinely fllllde at the dinner table of
tempted assassination is willing to his parents were made in his.presen·
suffer the· consequences of being ce today . .Would such an attitude
caught carrying an illegal handgun. toward handguns materialize?
At .this point one asks, really, the
Conceivably - let us permit ollr·
Would YOU obey
selves to think it - we would have ultimate

that law? I gue~~~~ .I own fOiir or five ct
those things, alwaye bave, ueed to
shoot snakes and thlnga u a boy,
and woodchucks. I even have a permiBsion to carry one in my pocket in
New York City, diepeneed af!e{ a
rather imaginative threat on my life
when I ran for mayor of Ne\9 York.
Would I hang on to one of these, .in
my home, against U, &lt;;Oiltingency of
the man with the knife - or with the
gun - coming at me, or my wife?
If I could answer that question
with assurance, I'd have a better
idea of whether SACA woUld work.

a

' ..

~-

ON Till!: W/IY- Ron .·.Oester of the Cincinnati
lhrow to lint eompleUng a double play during the lourth inning. Randy
Bass of the San Diego Padres failed to break up the play. (AP Laserpboto) .
.

Wellston edges
Marauders, 5-3

The Daily Sentinel

.

.

.....-.IIJ!ll.

LU 1'ER'i or

lll ' l~JUN

·

an· 14t·lrumt'd. Tht · ~ ' ""uld lw h·:-.., thttll

:roo ~~our d~ Inn~: . All

lt' lh·r~ 11r~ · ~uhJ.t'l ' l 111 t• dhlnJ.: . ~tld mlJ~t ht· ~ iJ.:nt · tl " lth n~nw . ;~ddrt·~ ~ and lt• lt•phunt•
tlumlwr . 'llu un~•~nt :d lt-th·r~ 14 ill ht' Jluh\i,ht•tl. J A'l lt•r.' ~ huu l tl ht• in ~tu~tl ~s it'. addrt'~sin~
~~~ UI '' · lltil P• 'r&gt; III\Uhli!''·

Leuers to editor
Let's support it._________

A mix-up

Like most citizens in the Unitt!U
States today, I tire of the negative. I
would like to give the citizens some
"fo.od for thought" on the positive.
The past few weeks I have gone
through quite an experience and exSome rental housing people say that President Reagan's tax proposals posure. Let me digress !am somewhat of a coward when
have their priorities a bit mixed up.
Rental housing, they say, is the most affordable, and so the most needed, it comes to medicines, doctors, and,
housing these days. Though rents are rising, they say, more people can af· especially, hospitals. This is
probably due to the fact that the
. ford to rent than can buy tract houses or condominiwns
Lord
has been good to me in the area
; · But, says the National Multi-Housing Council, so~e proposals of the
of
health
over my life.
; Reagan administration could endanger construction of rental units.
I found mysell in need of good
'
Allen Cymrot, vice chairman of the council, admits there's a sell-interest,
but he asks that it not cloud the issue, which he says is whether the country is medical advice and possible
surgery. I visited one of our new
going to have enough housing,
He begins with the rental vacancy rate of 4.8 percent, the lowest in the 25 young medical doctors, Dr. James
years since the statistic has been kept. Then he points out the decline in the Witherell, who, in turn, combined
with one of our new young surgeons,
number of units on which construction began.
In 1977, starts were made on 414,000 units in buildings of five or more units. Dr. Johnny Brawner, to care for my
Of these, about 203,000 received no Federal subsidies or mortgage insurance. problems, "all within walking
distance of my home in Pomeroy,
They represented the size of the private market.
The number fell to 173,000 units in 1978, to 125,000 in 1979, and to about How Sweet !tis! "
They seemed to sense my fears
43,000 in 1980, along with a vacancy rate decline in some cities to under 3 per·
and
provided the time to talk, ex·
cent, and to a 4.8 percent national average.
plain
and point out step by step the
At the same time, says Cymrot, who is also president of The Robert A. McNeil Corp., San Mateo, Calif., one of the nation's largest owners and problem and its solution. From this
operators of rental housing, many thousands of units are lost each year to
age, fire, conversion and other factors.
Result: a net annual loss of stock, and a gap between rental needs and
production in the 1980s that Cymrot estimates will be 1.2 million to 4.6 million
units. He contends the situation already is serious.
If passed, he adds, the tax proposals of the Reagan administration will
Back in the late '60s, Jean-Jacques
make matters even worse.
Servan-&amp;hreiber
had an ominous
One of these proposals would permit rental housing to be depreciated in
;
message
lor
most
of the industrial .
; equal installments over an I&amp;-year period. Since most structures cannot now
democracies.
·
: be depreciated so swiftly, you might think owners of rentBl units might be
.In a provocative study titled "The
happy, Their mood, however, is the opposite.
American
Challenge," .the French
First, the equal installment depreciation actually cuts into after-tax retur·
author-edi~r·politieian looked to the
ns in the early years of a building's life, when owners need all the cash they
future of their increasingly in, can get. At least under existing law, they say, they can use accelerated
: depreciation methods, which create a higher return during a building's early termeshed economies and forecast
no change in the U. S. domination
years.
that
had characterized the post-war
,
Next, says Cymrot, owners dislike what they feel is the worst tax deal of
era. Only much moreofthesarne.
; any type of structure. Owner-occupied factories, retail stores and
The American economy was so
' warehouses are rn line for !~year depreciation. Other structures would be
large,
so efficient and so innovative
; allowed l&gt;year depreciation under current proposals.
that
the
other countries had no real
~
The consequence of the proposals, he predicts, would be an even more
hope of competing. Worse, they were
' serious housing shortage. Rents would rise, and conversions to C&lt;Hlps and
doomed to seeing the choicest porcondos would increase.
r
Cymrot argues that rental housing, which he says already is on the bare tions of their own economies taken
·by American owners. This
l edge of profitBbility, should he allowed a !&gt;year, accelerated depreciation over
process
already was·well under way
: plan to encourage builders, and keep rents from soar ing.
through the acquisitions of the
American advance guard, the multi·
••t
natonal corporations that were
•
busily buying into or outright an
assortment of French, Britlah, German and other enterprlees. 'lbe alarming prospect wu raleed that whole
j·
national economies might be on the
Today 15 Thursday, Aprill6, the 106th day of 1981. There are 259 days
way to becoming little more than
; left In the year.
subsidiaries
of the American
•
Today' a highlight in history:
••~ , On April I&amp;, 1917, the Communlst leader Lenin retumed to Ruesia after
l · years of nile to IIS8UIIIe leadership of the RUII8ian revolutionary

•
• •
m pnonttes
•

••

.

~ ..if

'YouOOLY~ K~OJS ~IN THis tAAN'~ AAMv,-rnm OFFICER ~AL.'

t\ .\!EMBER uf Tlw A~~lll' i a l rd P rl'~~ - In land ])ail I P r t'~~ .\ssufi aliun and th t'

Amuit 11 11 .\'t"•t spaJwr Publ isht·r~ A~M,.' ill ti tJn .

.

spot, arra~gements were made
directly acrpss the street for my
surgery and recovery period.
I cannot find enough descriptive
adjectives to describe the excellent,
prompt, unllerstanding, kindness
and care, abjlve and beyond ·all expectations, lllat I received at our
own Veterans]Memorial Hospital.
Yes, we do have a positive fine
hospital. One lhat hires local people,
is well equip~d. has talented young
doctors that have established homes
and families in our rural community. Peopl~ that care.
This positive institution needs our
patronage, ~upport and encouragement. We need to do all in
our power to ~ncourage the young
doctors, their families and all the
talent at our hospital that we are
proud of them, we need them, we
.will support 11\em, and we want
them to stBy with w and help us
develop mo.re and more positive
situations in our_pomunity!
Sincerely.- ~bert B. Morris.

President's work
presents dilemma
'

WASHINGTON- The timing was
so right that even the White House
spokesman had to smile.
When deputy press secretary
Larry Speakes let out the word that
the • recuperating president was
working two hours a day, the wags in
the press room shot back: "Oh,
business as usual."
While Ronald Reagan was
hospitalized, recovering from the
gunshot wound inflicted in the March 30 assassination attempt, his
senior aides took pains to convey an
image of a functioning president,
meeting with advisers, signing
papers, working on the telephone.
They made an early morning trip
to his room each day and then kept a
slow but steady stream of important
visitors flowing over there.
But now that Reagan is back in the
White House - if not the Oval Office
- that effort seems to have relaxed.
"Enough has gotten out, even to
Peoria, that the president ill feeling
good, getting things done, signing
papers," said one !l'esidenlial
assistant, who asked not to be !den-

'

tified.
·Questions about how much work
the president has been doing present
his aides with a dllenuna. On the one
hand, they have been saying that
business is being conducted as
usual, that the work of the White
House is moving forward.
But on the other band, they have
acknowledged that progress 15 being
made even though the president's
work time ill only a few hours a day.
This has invited questions about how
much difference it makea when the
president is incapacitated.
When healthy, Reagan has
operated at a much-reduced pace
than his predecessor. Jimmy Carter
was often in the Oval Office before
sUIII'ise, worked most of the day and
returned there after dinner.
But the fact that Carter speJt
those long hours at work never
seemed to make much of an Impression with the voters, and the
Reagan staff made no effort before
the shooting to disgulee thia
president's penchant for taking a
Wednesday afte11100n off when he
could.

Updating the challenge.------=.:no:.:.:...n

j

1:Today.in

history. ..

•

~

•'
•'

movement.

On thll date:
In 1908, the Pacific cable wu completed between the United States and

China.

,

In 1946, U.S. troops entered Nurenberg, Germany, during World War II.
In 1947, more than 500 people died in flrea and esploetons at teue City,
Te181, when 1 French freighter loaded ll'ltll nitrate blew up.
In 1m, the ApOllo IS utronauts were launched toward the m0011 from
Cape Kennedy, Fla.
, ,
Ten yean .,o: Prelldent Richard Nixon eaid the United Stales would
not hallllir raldlln Vietnam WIW Nonh Vietnam releaaed all American

:

pr11c1nn otnr.

L.

nation'• popaliiUoniJI'Vll'lh.

•
:
~

'1
•

~

(

·

Fin ,..,.. ap: India IJIIIOUIK'«&lt; a Dill' birth control plan to el011' the

i

G.:::.:..:ra':l.Lff

dynamo.

So how accate a prophet has
ServalhSchreibe proved to be?
Come now, you know the answer to
that even if you never go near the
.economic cOIWIIII8. References to
American sllppa~e pop up as well in
just about every Qther section of the
paper with the ~ble exceptions of
the comics and ciassifieds, and that
may be coming,
That elippage Clln be measured in
a number of ways ~ in annual trade
deficits, in c bing sales of
Japanese aut s and other
sophisticated fore! n manUfacturers
in the U. S. marke ·In the mounting
distreas of dom c producers and
in the yo-yo pe
ce of the
dollar in relation to other major
cummcies.
Now the Confel'llnce' B'oard, the
New York·bued nojrprofit business
research organlzatiiJII, hu come out
with another meuurement that hu
une~ rel~an.:e to ServanSchrelber'a ~ ftgwnenl.
American ftrme, Which li'I'Oie the
book on the lllOder!l multi-national
operati111 ("~CNI" II the

term now favored at the United
Nations and in some other quarters), are no longer predOminant in
that area. The majority of the
world's largest corporations,
operating intematlonaliy, are today
non-American enterpriaes.
In 1971, 2M~ of the world's 500
largest lndwtrial firma were
American. By 19'19, the latest year
for which comprehensive data Is
available, the U. S. share bad dropped to 219. Of a· more select group,
the 100 largest corporations, the
American representatioo dropped
from 58 in 1fll to 47 in the most
recent ranking.
In banking, working within a dif·
ferent time span, the shift 15 even
more striking. In 1966, the world's
largest 100 banks lnchlded 44
American lnstitutlone holding a cmbined 53 percent of depoetts, By 1978,
there were only 15 American banks
In thle group with 15 percent of the
depoalts.
Obviously, Servan-Schrelber ,li'U
right in one respect - the nature of
the economic trend. It certalrily does
aPJI* cminoua, but not for the non-

.SAN DIEGO (AP) - Unlike last as the Reds swept their three-game second to open the sixth and the stage for Driessen's blast.
year, the Cincinnati Reds' Dan series with the Padres and won their Reds were off and running.
The Padres got their only run in
Driessen says he's feeling no pain,in . ninth consecutive game at San Diego
Dave Concepcion, who drove in the bottom of the sixth when former
Jack Murphy Stadium.
1981.
three runs, doubled Collins home Yankeee Ruppert Jones, mired in a
The slick-fielding first .baseman
Right-hander Mario Solo, 1·1, Cin- and George Foster walked to set the 2-for-29 slump, hit a sacrifice fly
was suffering from , painful bone cinnati's lop pitcher after the All·
spurs in his right hand when he StBr game last year with a 9-5 record Ir - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - finished the 1980 season. Yet despite and 2.29 earned run average, picked
the discomfort, he compiled a .265 up where he left off by holding the
batting average, only slightly below Padres to three singles while
his .m career average.
striking out nine and walking three.
To relieve the pain, Driessen unSan Diego w6n its first two games
derwent surgery Dec. 2 to remove of the season, · but since then has
the spurs. He looked fully recovered dropped five in row. The team bat·
Wednesday night ~she drove in four ling average is a paltry .200 after the
runs with a homer and a single to Padres managed only eight singles
lead the Reds past the San Diego ' and a double while scoring two niiiS
Padres!~!.
in the three games with the Reds.
• Spectacular Color
"I wasn't really worried during
But first-year San Diego Manager
Graphics and Exciting
the off-season," said Driessen. "I Frank Howard says he's not worried
Sound
figured there would be enough time about the feeble offensive produc• Plug-In Program Paks for
for the hand to heaL I can swing tion since the season began.
Entertainment, Personal
without pain, but I'm still working
"They just outplayed us," Howard
Use
with dwnbbells and rubber balls to said. "Maybe a day off tomorrow
• Write Your Own Programs
strengthen my hand.' '
(Thursday) will help us. I never ex·
And Save Them on
The hand looked strong enough in peeled us to get only nine hits in
Cassettes
the sixth inning when Driessen, bat- three games. But the guys are trying
ting just .190 thus far, belted a Steve and I plan to stay with, the same
• Easy for Beginners to Use,
Expandable for Experts
Mura pitch into the right field stands lineup."
for a three-run homer, capping a
Mura, ~I, was locked in · a
IJ":&gt;e your o wn coiQt f\' ana
scoreless duel through the first five
four-run inning.
ca":&gt;St'lt£' rec ordet o r buy ours
The nine-year veteran singled in innings, giving up just two hits. But
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Americans.
On the other hand, the reversal of
the trend of a decade ago may not be
quite so bad lor OW' side u might appear.
For one thing, it muet be remembered that those post,war decades
were economically abnormal times.
The United Stales, the only industrial economy that had come
through World War ll not only unscathed but lllmulated by the
demande of the confUct, would have
been the world champion under any
circwnstances through elimination
for a time of any real competition.
That competition was etill
recovering and rebuilding well into
the '60.s.
.For anOther, It wu primary
Ainerican policy to elicOurage that
rebuilding to retUrn the world
economy 1!1 something like • stale of
pre-war nonnalty, In which the
United States had bad plenty of competition.
What hu happened II not 111
American colllpM but a l"'lphruins
fl Servm&amp;hrelber'a tblail.

BY SCO'IT·WOLFE
Meigs lost a 5-3 decision to visitioi
Wellston Wednesday in an 'SEOAL
high school baseball contest The
Marauders are 2-5 on the season.
Pitcher Shane Cox, along with batterymate Todd Montgomery, went
the distance to pick up the win. Cox
struck out four and walked four in
pitching the complete game.
Roger Kovalchik, despite serving•
up two home runs, had a good game
on the mound for the Marauders. He
also went the distance to fan I0 and
walk four, allowing seven hits and
five runs.
Wellston took a ~ lead on Mon'tgomery home run over the cen·
terfield fence in the first inning, but
Meigs came fighting right back to
tBke a 3-2lead.
With one out, Kovalchik drew a
walk, Jerry Fields hit a powerful
line shOt off the shortstop's glove
that was ruled an error, and Terry
Wayland singled. Mlt)r a fielder's
choice, Steve Ohlinger hit a hard two
run double, the score 3-2:
Wellston took a 4-3 advantage in
the second inning, but got in trouble
In the third, when Meigs put runners
on first and second with no outs and
the heart of the line-up coming up.
Jeff Wayland then hit a shoulder
high line drive up the middle that
was miraculously caught by the

shortstop, who tagged second and
through to first for a triple play!

From1399

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AND DEALERS. CHECK YOUR LOCAL PHONE BOOK FOR LISTINGS.

Both teams remained scoreless
until the seventh when the Rockets
scored a single run, the final score 53.
Meigs-llit!el's-were Terry Wayland
with two singles, Steve Ohiinger a
double , Troy Broolls a single, and
Mike Miller.
For Wellston Todd Montgomery
doubled and hit a home run; Campbell hit a home run, and Midkiff
doubled to lead the.Golden Rockets.
Today Meigs travels to Ironton.
Unescore:
Wellston
22Q 000 1- 5 7 I
Meigs
300 000 0-3 5 2
Batteries: Kovalchik (LP) and
Wayland. Shane Dox (WP) and Montgomery. HR - Montgomery and
Campbell.

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Converse Fielde(s Choice '" Special
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Sponsor tournament
Hubbard's Greenhouse Softball
Team is sponsoring a Men's USSSA
sll}-pitch softball tournament ~
Class Cand Donly - on May 2 and 3 ·
at Syracuse. Individual trophies will
be given for first place. Team ·
SOTO'S DEUGHT - Mario Solo of the Cipclnnati Reds (361 is .
trophies will be awarded for first,
congratulated by Ray Knight Wednesday night following Solo's three-hit
second and third places. Entry fee is
$60 plus softballs. For information
1&amp;-1 victory. Solo had nine strike outs against the San Diego Padres to
call992-62118 or 992-3312.
rabie his record to 1·1. (APLaserpbolo) .

~ctitagr

of ,Gboe,G

Middleport. Ohio

Southwestern, Eastern cop
SVAC victories Wednesday
The Southwestern Highlanders error, Bissell tripled him home, and
edged the Southern Tornadoes, ii-4, Rob Smith followed with a single.
Wednesday evening in an SV AC
Eastern hitters were Mike Bissell,
baseball contest. Southern is now &amp;-3 who continued to have a great night
and 3-2 in the SVAC. Southwestern is at the plate, with a long 'triple and
5-3-1 o\lerall and 4-2 in the league.
single, and Gary Griggs, who bad an
A strong finish by talented Wayne outstanding night at the plate.
Sizemore propelled Southwestern to Griggs pounded a single and double
. the victory along with five costly to collect five RBI's. Rob Smith
Southern errors.
banged two singles, Greg Wigal a
Three Southwestern runs were single, Rogie Gaul a single, Mark
unearned.
Holter a single, and Nick Leonard
Sizemore's performance was
highllghted by 13 strike outs, while
he allowed only four walks.
Dale Teaford got the start for
Southern, ani;! was relieved by Rob
Cunningham. They combined to fan
five and walk just two.
. C. T. Chapman led Southern hitting with a single and double, Jay
Rees hit his third home run of the
year, whlcli was a two run shot, and
Bryan Wolfe had an RBI triple: Kent
Wolfe singled, Paul Cardone singled,
and Joe Bob Hemsley eingled.
For Southweetem Jay Burleson
doubled and singled, Sizemore
singled, Gilbert singled, Scott
RUS8ell singled, Layton singled, and
Nida singled.
The winning run was scored in the
sixth on a Nida single, a Sizemore
wallt, a fielder's choice and error,
and a sacrilice fly by Gilbert.
·

SPECIAL

had a single.
Church led North Gallia with three
singles, Shupe had two singles,
Barry Marcwn had two singles, and
Hollingshead had a triple.
Eastern hosts Waterford today
and Miller Friday.
Unescore :
NG
000 200 1 3 8 3
Eastern
211 252 x- 13 10 I
Butteries : Holter (SPJ and
Griggs. Shupe (LP) and Marcum.

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The Eutern Eagles rolled to a 13-3
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onnllllld'-ZilltheSVAC.
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Mark Hollel: Wlllt the dlllance for
Eut.ern to, pidt up tile win. He
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Southern 15 idle until next week,
although the Southern reserves boat
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Llnescore:
Southern
003 100 0-4 7 5
SW
002 M1 x- 5 7 0
Batteries: Sizemore (WP) and
Rulaell. Teaford, Cwmlngham (l.P)
and Rees. HR- Jay Rees.

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M2·2141

Pomeroy, Ohio
I,

�'

Pomeroy Mic141~rt. Ohio

Thursday, Aprill6.1981 .

.;,P..;a;.;g:,;;e;....4;...T.;.;.;.he;.;D,;;a~ii:.:,Y,;;S,;;e~n,;;ti:.:.;n;,e;.l____________________.:;P,::o::,:m:,:e:.:,r,::ov!::::M=id~d~le:!p~o::,r!;t,~O::_:h~i~o-----------------;...-..:..--T~h!!I,sdax~~e!;ill6 , !981

f'f

Marblorll, TwiDI'S'
·
·, in my opening' day lineup, didn't J? .
By As1oclated Press
Richie
ZiSk
and
Joe
Sim~
each
The Oakland A's pitcllers are star- · He's jil$1 been dofug great, but so
ting this ~on where they left off has everyone. It's been a team e' . knocked in two runs and Jerry Don «
last year. And so are the Oakland fort. I dori't want to put any aclded Glealon pitcbell lout-hit baD for ,.
seven innings aa Seattle beat )lin..
pressure on him."
hitters, particularly Tony Armas.
In other AL action, the Seattle ~ota. Trailing ~ In the ·third in· ~
The A's, who set a major-league
record last year for complete games Mariners edged the )\iinnesota ning, the Mariners scored four times !
with 94, gO! another complete game Twins !i-5; the Boston Red Sox beat to lake the lead for good aa Ziak's ~
. '
out of a starter when Rick Langford the Baltimore Orioles 7-2; · the RBI double keyed the rally.
Red
Sox
7,
OriolesZ
:
went the distance Wednesday night Chicago White Sox stopped ·lhe
Carl Yastrzemski drove In three :
in a ii-3 victory over the California Milwaukee Brewers $-1; the Texas
Ailgels. That's the sixth time in Rangers rocked the Cleveland In· runs . in liis 1981 debut and Tony :
seven games this year that a starter dians U.O; the New York Yankees Perez hit a two-l'WI homer to lead •
;
has completed a game for the un- beat the Toronto Blue Jays &amp;-3 and Boston over Baltimore.
the
Detroit
Tigers
blanked
the
Kan·
defeated A's.
..-'------""-'--~-Meanwhile, Armas, hoping to mat- sas City Royals W .
Annas' towering drive to center
ch last season's hom~run total of 35,
field at Anaheim Stadium came af·
slugged his fourth of the season.
" If 7~ isn't rolling, nothing is," ter three walks and a ground ball
said Manager Billy Martin. "It's broke up a shutout bid by Angel starjust great. The kids are excited and ter Jesse Jefferson.
Rick Burleson bad four hits for
we're going home Friday to a soldout crowd. I'd take 7~ any time of California. He singled home the first
run of the game in the third and
the year."
Annas obviously has been one of tripled to lead off the sixth, scoring
the C?talysts of the be$t-&lt;!ver start in on a sacrifice fly by F·red Lynn.
Singles by Tom Brunansky and But·
Oakland history.
"He threw me a fastball down the ch Hobson and a groundout extended
middle and I just was swinging the Angels'lead to 3-0 in the seventh.
hard," said·Armas of his three-run rr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~;;;;;~~
shot off Andy Hassler in the eighth
inning that capped a four-run rally
after the A's had been down ~. "I
•i
couldn't believe he would pitch to me
so late in the game with a right·
Ph. 992·5776 Syracuse, Oh.
bander up in the bullpen. Actually, I
NOW OPEN .FOR
haven't had much luck against him
SPRING SEASON
(a
before. He usually gets me out with
• PoHed Plants
hissinker.''
• Comp 1e t e line of bedding
Armashadapoor springtraining,
Pl.a nts a'nd hanging
WMPO
but Martin never lost confidence in
baskets.
thenativeVenezuelan.
AIIDozenPacks . 9~cdoze
SATURDAYS
"I wasn't concerned at all," said
Hours: OpenDaily9to8
8 til Noon

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

CEY SAFE ON SQUEEZE - Ron Cey. Los
Angeles Dodgers, is safe at home on squeeze play In
second inning of game with San Francisco Giants Wed·

nesday night. Dodgers Bill Russell laid down bunt that
was fielded by Giants' pitcher Ed Whitson. Whitson
tossed to catcher Wilt May who didn't handle the ball.
Umpire is Jerry Dale. (AP Laserphoto).

·

-------------------~----~M:a~rt:in~·-"~I~ha=d~him~:in~t:he~N:o·:4~s~po:t~~~~~~su~n~. ~~~~o~s~~~~~~::::::::::::::::::::~

the bat in your hand." sa id Andre ["
Dawson, who singled home the tying
•·un in the eighth and scored the win·
ner on Carter 's hit.
In other National League action,
the New York Mets defeated St.
Louis 5·3. Houston blanked Atlanta
2~ . Philadelphia edged Pittsburgh 43 111 11 innings, Cincinnati bombed
San Diego W·1 and Los Angeles took
San Francisco 4-2 to remain un·
beaten.
Chicago h~d a 4-3 lead going into
the eighth 11 111ing and Cubs reliever
Bill Ca udill had retired 10 baiters in
a •·o w before walking Rodney Scott
with one uut.
Scott stole second and Dawson
then sin ~ led off relieve r Dick
Tidrow. 1·1, to score Scott and tie the
game 4-4 . An error on an attempted
pickoff throw bv Tidrow sent
Dawson to third. before Carter
blooped a smgle to right·center field.
" I was chokmg up on the bat, just.
hoping to make contqct,'' he said. " I
ended up breaking the bat, but the
end result was good anyway."
Stan Bahnsen, H, was the wmner
in relief of Rogers, pitching the last

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two innings.

Mets 5, Cardinals 3
New York also won its home
opener, getting a two-run single
from Doug Flynn and a two-run
triple from rookie Mookie Wilson
both 1n the second inning.
'
Right-hander Pat Zachry went 513 innings for his second straight victory.

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Jill ell SIDnt or Dtlltr NtiNII You PA1ces MAY vARY AT INo•v•ou AL sroRes AND DIAlllll
ADIVISION OF ·TANDY CORPO~ATION

•
·------·------- ·- - ----·---

____ __ __
;;.....

...____

That's the way it's been all year

By WW Grlmlley
AP Correspondent
His nickname is "The Tooz." He's
the biggest, most notorious
renegade on the Oakland Raiders.
And at 6-foot-3 and 280 pounds, he
finds it tough to hide.
Not that John Matuszak tries very
often.
It was nobody but The Tooz who
danced his way to a $1,000 fine on
Bourbon Street at 3 in the morning a
few days before the Super Bowl.
It was nobody but The Tooz who
jumped from the National Football
League to the World Football
League and got served with a court
prder on national television at hall·
time of a WFL game.
It was nobody but The Tooz who
wound up playing the role of a
lunatic football player in "North
Dallas Forty," bashing his head
against a soda machine to psyche
himsell up for a game.
And it's nobody but The Tooz
,Playing Tonda, a caveman in 1what else• - "Caveman," his
.;second film, a comedy with, as be
'describes it, "14 words of dialogue
:and a couple of hundred grunts."
: "They'll never be able to say on
~my tombstone: 'He remained
,anonymous,'" Big John says. "I
•don't know if that's the booby prize
:or life, remaining anonymous. A ld.
~ of people would like to be
anonymous. A lot of times I'd like to
:just blend in with the crowd. But no
:way! Doesn't mean I don't try,
;though.
• "Doing movies, I get to show the
:easier-going side that I have, the
:side that likes to stay out of trouble,
\the side that likes to be Santa Claus
!at children's hospital. I usually
; don't get the chance to show that.

.•
~Name

to ·seven

have that type of effort,'' he said.
"There was no other alternative."
Walter Davia scored 16 of his :1Jl
points in the first half, including six
in a 1~2 Suns burst that gave them a
47-311ead with 3:42 remaining in the
second period. Kansas City cut the
margin to 10 points in the fourth
period before Robinson led a late
charge that widened it to :1Jl with
barely three minutes to play.
76ers 116, Bucks 99
Lionel Hollins and Maurice
Cheeks scored 20 points apie&lt;;e and
Julius Erving had 19 as Philadelphia
moved within one game of
eliminating the Bucks and setting up

games

yet another 76ers-Celtics con·
frontation.
· Sidney Moncrief and Mickey John·
son each had 20 points for
Milwaukee, which shaved a 1ii-point
Philly lead to six points with about 8
minutes to play but couldn't get any
closer.

McEnroe wins
LOS ANGELES (AP) - TOJ&gt;"
seeded John McEnroe downed onseeded Ferdi Taygan 6-1, 6-3 during
first-round singles competition in
the $75,000 Jack Kramer Tennis
Open at the Los Angeles Tennis
Club.

CARR1E.R NEED
1NM.lDDLEPORT
IN TiiE AREA Of PARK ST. &amp; PEARL ST.
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""1

The Dal"ly Sentl"ne. l
PHONE 992 2156
•
BElWEEN 8·.30 and 5·.00

~F~ed~e~ra~l;H~oc~ki~·n;g~to~ru;·g~h~t.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

.For the
record. • •

"People are going to write or say
whatever they want about me, but I
do like to try and disprove the image
once in a while. Besides, I have a
good time and don't step on otherMalorLeapoBud&gt;oU
people's toes, and I think that's im·
AMERICAN LEAGUE
portant. You've just got to be yourEAST
Prl GB
W L
sell. U people are going to think
.100 Detroit .
I
I
something, let 'em think it."
3 2
.100 1
New York
2 2
Matuszak puts the Super Bowl title Baltimore
.100
""
!
2 .500
11'.
...
in perspective. " World cham- !los!
.100
l l'o
2
2
Milwaukee
2 3 .100 I
pionship rin g. Nice . Great. Toronto
.250 21'.
I
3
Something to be proud of," he says. Cleveland
~, 0 1.000 "But you've got to stay proud ri Oakland
.7$0
2..
3 I
Chicago
yoursell every day. The Super Bowl, california
.429
4
3 •
.100
•
2 3
That's over. Done. And there's a lot Texa11
.333 I I'.
I
I
SeatUe
more to life than winning world KJiltllall City
.250 ...
I 3
I
$
.1117
510
Mlnnesola
championships."
WedDelciiY'I Gamet
In "Caveman," ronda is chief of a
Boston 7, BaltimOre 2
Chicago 5, Milwaukee 4
tribe. One of the other cavepersons
Teus I, Cleveland 0
is his smashing girllriend, Lana,
New Yortr. &amp;, toronto 3
DetroU 4, KJiltllall Clly 0
played by Barbara Bach. Tonda finOakland 5, California 3
ds competition for her affections
S..W.6,Mlnneo&lt;tla$
'
Tllw'Hoy'o Gomeo
from a runt called "Took," (Ringo
Cleveland !Garland 1141 II MUwa utee
Starr ). Tonda tosses him out of the tCaklweU
1.0)
Dttroit fWilcol l·(lJ at ToroniO {Clancy
cave, and ...
), lftl
· As foolish as the movie might 1-GOU1and
1Keough Ht) at California
seem, Big John insists on tossing tWiU 0.0), ~11)
Only @ames scheduled
around words like "challenging" in
Fridriy's G•mH
Boston at Chica11o
describing the film.
Detro6t al Toronto
" We had to work on pllntomime
BaltimOre at Kafllll8 City, In)
Nt!w York at Teus, In)
and not rely on the English
Minnesota at Calllomia, 1n1
language," he says. "That's why I SeatUe
at Oakland. {n)
Only game~ ochedwed
accepted the role, because of the
challenge of not having the'English
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
language. And working with Ringo,
W L Pd. GB
Barbara, Avery Schreiber, Jack New York
3 I
.750 .1167
~
2 1
Gilford, people like them, you can't Montreal
3
2
.5011
~
Pltiladelphia
help but learn."
I 2
St. l.ool.!
.333
·
.2$0
!~
I 3
"I'm just trying to get my second Chicago
I
3
.250 2
Pi11aburg)1
career going ... I want to have
WEST
6 0 1.000
enough of a repertoire of films so l&lt;to Anl!eles
CincinniiU
$
2
.711
I~
that when I'm done playing football I A1lanla
3 3
.100
3
2 4
.333 I
can say, 'I've done this; I've done Houston
San Dleso

Ul.at.'''

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favorites for toomey

Monlre&amp;l 5, Chlcogo 4
New VOlt 5, St.Looil 3
Philadelphia 41 Pllllburgh I, II lnnin&amp;s
H0t1S1011 2, Auonla 0
CindnniU 10, Sin Diego I
l&lt;to An!lel.. 4, San rronc~~co 2

•
: ORLANDO. Fla. (AP) - Nancy tee. And the greens are in real good
n.ndly'IGI.et
ClUcqo (Knvec 0.0) at Mcrtlrtal !Gu.l·
:Lopez-Melton and Beth Daniel, who shape."
Daniel earned the same two titles llcUon~)
·have dominated the women's goll
St.Louia IRlncoo ~ I Ill Ntw York
~I
:circuit for the past three·years, are last year and will play in a !Sc«&lt;
Pltllburgh ID.Roblnaon ~ I at PhiJo.
threesome
today
and
Friday
with
:among the favorites in the Lady
dtloltia (~ 0.1), (nJ
Only pmell IChtduled
:Citrus · goll tournament starting Lopez-Melton and Alice Miller.
.......,.. a.Donna Horton White, who won by San Francisco ot AUanla , lnl
•today . .
over Jane Blalock last year, St.Looil It CtnclnnoU, In)
Not only that, they a~ paired a
11 Plilldelplllo, In)
is
pregnant
and will miss this year's 011ta10
!together In the flrst two round in the
Plllaburih 11 Houston, (n)
1M An!!elts 11 San Diego, lnl
!$100,000 Ladies Professional Golf tournament, officials said.
Only gltiMI IICheduled
• Aasociation event that will draw 90
: ptostothe Rio Pinar Country Club. ..-----------=------..,.--7---4
; Another strong pl'()flpect is Donna
•Caponi, the one-stroke winner of last
; week's LPGA tournament in
~ Raleigh, N.C.
: The 6,m.yard Rio Pinar .Course
• can be treacherous, particularly in
: the wind. Par is 73.
: "I feel pretty good about the way
\ I'm playing," said Lopez-Mellon,
1 winner of Player of the Year awards
I ai1d leading money winner in 1978
: and1979.
'
"Thetairways aren't 'in real good
! shape but the course ill good,'' said
! Lopez-Mellon, a first-time entrant
bere. "It requtres accuracy off the

stroke

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APRIL 10

CRASHING THROUGH - San Antonio Spul'll' forward Paul Griffin
loaes control of bls sbol as he .crashes Into Houston Rockelll' center
Billy Pault~ (5) In the flrsl period of Wednesday night's game ID Houston.
Paulb was cbarged with a foul on the play. San Antonio ·won tbe game,
101-!16, to send tbe 'deadlocked NBA playoH series Into a tie-breaking
seventh game. (AP Laserphoto).
(30)

a

rs----------.------------------------•B•u•y•n•ow
__

By,Aslocialed Preis
for the Rocke~. trying to become
In Texas, the vlaitln' folks still feel · the first team in 13 y~ars to reach an
right at home.
'
NBA conference final with a losing
Wednellday night, for the fourth ·record (40-42) in the regular season.
time In six Nati\1(18) Basketball
Calvin Murphy, who had 20 points,
Ass!&gt;ciation playOff games between put Houston ahead 90-87 with 7
. Houston and San Antonio, the hosts minutes til play, but Gervin, Paul
were most gracious. This time it was Griffin and Mark Olberding hit suethe Rockets, who allowed the Spurs cessive baskets to put San Antonio in
towin101-!16.
front to stay. Griffin and Olberding
That sends their Western Dlvlaion finished with 12 points apiece.
semifinal series back to San Antonio
Suns 101, Kings 89
for Friday nigllt's decisive seventh
Truck Robinson scored 15 points
game - and the Spurs hope the .and grabbed 20 rebounds to keep
home-court hex will finally vanish. · Phoenix!s hopes alive. "We had to
· "We've had such a strong home
record all season, and now I hope it
comesbacktous,"saidGeorgeGervln, who led the Spurs with 26 points.
''It's time now for us to take adHannan Trace led all the way to
vantage of our fans screaming at us post a 13-5 victory over Kyger Creek
to put it away."
in an SVAC contest at Cheshire Wed·
In the NBA's other Western nesday afternoon.
semifinal, Kansas City failed to
The Wildcats' Greg Webb led the
wrap things up. losing 101-39 to hitters with three safeties. including
Phoenix. The Kings lead the series g.· a double and two RBis. Mike Waugh
2. And in the remaining Eastern and Toby Sheets hall two each.
.
semifinal (the Boston Celtics won
Terry Porter had four hits for the
their series !rem Chicago in four Bobcats and was assisted· with two
straight), Philadelphia took a 3-2 from Mike Swisher. Kelly Petrie
lead with a 116·99 triumph over was on the mound for all innings for
Milwaukee.
Hannan Trace while KC's Jack
MosesMalone, whobad36points Minor was relieved after two by
and 10 rebounds for the Rockets, saw Willie Noble.
the game as "an opportunity to jump
The win puts Hannan Trace at 3-5
and strut and celebrate tonight. overalland3-3intheSVAC. KC is!-5
· Things just didn't go our way. It in the league and Hi overall. The
seemslikewe'vejuslgottodothings Wildcats play S)immes Valley
the hard way."
·
tonight while the Bobcats host

Wildcats rip KC

sey Kasem

• frosty opener
E Xpos ed ge CU b S m
By Associated Press .
All baseball players dream of
swinging a hot bat. On Wednesday 111
Montreal, even that didn 't help them
make it through the frosty day.
The record books will show that
the Montreal Expos beat the
Chicago Cubs 54 in their home
opener, but the chill in the players'
bones will be remembered long after
the score is forgotten.
" I Fayed we weren 'I going to play
13 or 14 innings out there," said Gary
Carter, whose eighth·inning single
capped a two-run ra lly that won the
game for Montreal.
"I couldn't feel my hands, I
couldn't feel my ea rs and iny nose
was running ," Carter said. " I can't
wait to get into the sauna. It was the
coldest game I ever played in."
The gamHime temperature was
announced as 39 degrees. but third
baseman Larry Parrish said the
chewing tobacco in his back pocket
froze and he found ice patches on the
field. A biting wind made it feel 20
degrees colder.
. Some of the players tried to warm
up their bats in the saulll! room, but
said it didn 't help because they got
cold again immediately after going
outside again. ,Pitchers usually try
to save all their energy for when
they are on the mound, but Expos
starter Steve Rogers tried to keep
wann by riding a stationary bicycle
between innings.
" It was so cold that you 'd get to
the plate and wouldn't be able to feel

·NBA pl~yoffs will go

A's win seventh straight ...~

..,.

The Daily. Sentinel-Page-S

-

,Plan work .session
'·

The PGmeroy Youth League is
p1ann1r1c a work day for saturday at
' !be Utile leq1le fields above Meigs
High llcboolllartlnll at 10 a.m.
· Toole required are hoes, .raket,
1 banunerl,
lawn mowers, wheel
i ~ ud muonry trowell. Lut
latarday only two ~ other
........ CCIIdlellilowell up to work.
"U a ~!~J~ch '*' llive up ·tine or
tear n111111 a week for your dllld,
•IIJI't))r JOU can pve at leut one or
. two dl1l Ill tile tlllln - . We
' ...... ' - ' yow llllp! ," commenta' Phil Harrlaon, lta1ue

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�Page-6-The Oaily Sentinel

Thursday, Aprll_16,1981

•

A surprise party was held
recently honoring Kelly Lynn
Smith, dsughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Smith, Route I, Mid·
dleport, on her sixth birthdsy.
The party was held at the home
of her sister, Mrs. Michael (Cin·
dy) Smith, Middleport. Games
were played with prizes going to
Tina Smith, Randy Smith and
Donna Robbins. Others attending
were Mrs. Terry Smith and Shan·
non, Mrs. June Smith, Mrs. Delr
bie Davidson and John Michae~
Mrs. Terf)( Smith, Ricky and
Robbie, Tina Hendricks, Crystal
and Tracy Manley, Mrs. i)Qrcas
Manley and Steve, Terri and Ken·
neth Michael Currance, Jackie
Lee, Brends Robbins, Mrs. Connie Manley and Junior, Mrs.
Mary McCa rty and Keith and
Mrs. Debbie Kittle, Christopher
and Todd.
Sending gifts were the Rev. and
Mrs. O'Dell Manley, Mrs. Ruth
Farmer, Kimberly and Kenneth
Michael Smith, Mrs. Mae Light·
foot, and Mrs. Elizabeth Johnson,
grandmother, Columbus.
Refreshments included a Ted·
dy Bear cake baked for Kely
Lynn by her .sister-in·law, Mrs.
Terri Smith, and large heart·
shaped cakes made by her
sisters, Mrs. Debbie Davidson
and Mrs. Cindy Smith and a
friend, Mrs. Dorcas Manley. Also
served were potato chips, jelly
beans, Kool-Aid and mar·
shnoallow chickens.
Mrs. Cindy Smith and Mrs.
Debbie Davidson hosted the surprise party for Kelly .

born

PORTLAND VARIETY SHOW - "That's ·En- Roush, dancers who will be dancing to "Beg, Borrow,
tertainment" a Variety Show at Portland Elementary and Steal." "That's Entertainment" will be presented
School will feature a wide variety of entertainment by by the students of Portinnd · Elementary School
participating students. Pictured here are (l·r), Rebec- · Tuesdsy evening, April21, at 7:30p.m. Admission will
ca Roush, Rae Lynn Dalley, Becky Evans, and Sberrte be $1 for adults and 50 cents for students.

A meeting of the Bradbury PTA
scheduled for this evening (Thursdsy) has been postponed to Thur·
sday, Apri123.

On Dean 's List.

Chester; Jack and Jill's in '.
Gallipolis; Middleport Department.
Store, the New York Clothing House '
in Pomeroy, the Rutland Furniture
Store and at all Southern Local'
District elementary schools.

Mr. Cartoon visits
area on Saturday

Aprll17, ltll •
begin to look up
for you lhls coming year flnan·
cially.,Some of the ~eds vou'vi!
been •SOWing niay · ~e getting
read~' to yield a big harvest. ·
ARIES (March ' 21·April 19)
Parthershlp
arrangements
should turn out to be rewarding
for 10u today, especially if you
are Involved with someone who ·
has a,~nack for business. ·
TAuRUS !April 20.May 201
· Give vent to your artistic and
creative urges today. You're
. cap~ble of producing something
which will please you and others
as well..
.
GEMINI (May '21·June 20) This
could ~e. an exciting day roman·
tically· for unattached Geminis.
Someone with whom you will hit
It off .lhslantly may enter the pic·
lure.
CANCER (June 21·July 22)
Shop •around today for an item
you'\le been deballnjj about
buying because · of its price.
Therh a ~si.blllty II may not be
offered at a figure within your
means . .
LEO !July 23·Aug, 22) You're
easily motivated today con·
corning your material goals, but
what is more Important is that ·
you can come up with the right
bright ideas to achieve them.
VIRGO !Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Your
financial aspects are greatly
enhanced today because of your
practical attitude In monev m•l·
Thl~gs 'should

ters. You're a tough guy to beat
when it comes to stretching a
dollar.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 231With a

l ittle imaolnation 1 today you have

the capability to change
something so that it is more
profitable for you as well as for
so~eone

.with whom y_
o u're in·

volved.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) If
your ears are tingling a bit today

it could be because associates are

saying nice things about you. You
may hear of II later.
'
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec.
21) Just because other.s may feel
your present hopes' are a bit

outlandish,

don't

let

this

·discourage you from pursuing

them. They're niore rea listic
than your assoc lates think.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 191
Progress will come more easily
today ~ you lry 10 find en·
joyment, even where serious ob·

iectives are concerned. Whistle

while you work .

SQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 191
You ha"e the ability today to take

complicated

Weber family to gather

ideas

jind

suggestions and refine them to
their root values. You can make
sense of what others can't.

PISCES (Feb. 20·March 201

There's a strong possibility you

might be in ;ust the right spot
today at the right time to benefit
from sorpethlng good that

Lori Louks has been .named a
United States National Band Award
winner for 1981. Lori was nominated
by the Eastern High School Band
Director, James Wilhelm, for this
National Award.

The family of Jessie Mae Weber
(Mrs. Thomas Weber) \VIII have a
get-together Saturday with open
house to be observed from 2 p.m. to 4
p.m. at the residence of Mrs. Weber
in Chester.
Among the out-of-area family
members expected to be here are
Iris and Raymood Wilson, John
Robert and Kitty Wilson, Marilyn
Wilson Belcastro, John and Kathy
Wilson Pecora, Richard and Bar·
bara Wilson Pellegrini, Carl and
Sheryl Offutt, Ina Faye Harr, Art
and Helen Hines, Clara M. Wolfe,

The Academy selects the. USNBA
winners upon the exclusive recommendstion of the band director and
the official standards for selection
set forth by the USAA.
The criteria for selection includes
the following ; Musical ability,
dependsbUity, citizenship, leader·
ship, academics, enthusiasm, hand
director's recommendation, pride in
personal appearance, attitude and
coperative spirit and responsibility.

HAPPY FACES - This group wiU be singing "Put
on a Happy Face" in the Portland Elementary School
Variety show next Tuesday evening. Pictured are,
front, l·r, Joann Evans, Ann Sellers, J. J. Lawrence,

Nancy Hunt, and Sherrie Roush. Back row - Larry
Kenny Layne, Tricia Roush, Tanya Meadows,
Debbie Greathouse, Becky Evans, ll«ky Roush,
Michael Boso, and Ronnie Mullins.

S~llers,

Financial aid officer to

Colored Egg s, Candy

Potted Flowers
AI

The

THRIFT SHOPPE
Middleport, Oh .

1

SPORT COUPE
Slant 6 engine,
automati
air,

nl with
and In·
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power .

1976 FORD
ELITE

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Black with sliver
gray Interior, alloy
wheels. Loaded.

'5295

QUALIFIED NEW
CAR CUstOMERS

1978 BUICK
REGAL

1975 DODGE
CHARGER SE
Plush velour in·
terior , local owner.

another has going.

Auxiliary to sell poppies
.. The Stewart-Johnson V.F.W Post
9926 of Mason Ladies Auxiliary and ·
the Junior Girls Unit will be selling
Buddy Poppies in Middleport and·
Pomeroy on Saturdsy, April lB.
The V.F.W. Buddy Poppy sale has
been conducted nationwide since
1922. The proceeds 11re used ex·
elusively for the air, relief and comfort of disabled and needy veterans,
and the widows and the orphans of
deceased veterans.

LeVI'S
II

f\"" " '"

LEVI'S
FOR
GALS

SAVE
FOR
COLLEGE

hvauditions,
'&gt;
loA A Ill

I ),•,,~, l!'f

... /\

11"'1

II~

l/

fl

Ill ( ·, "'~. ' Ill ~ 't' / '"' ··~

PLH vnu r b1N fo ol fotw2'1 rd in fnsh1o rr Lvrth Au cliun r r~
t\l'Wl'SI dt&gt; ~ iy11 ~ Thl'l.'. fl! !:Jrl!dlfur Ed'&gt; I'"T dnd rrh er
Nl'W fl'rninim• ., fi,rrl''&gt; £~rH.l f r "'~ l1 color'&gt; . .:rllrrr

ric h ll:'alhl:'r \\i'ith Auditium _tll ll1fun i~ hu ih ill !I I
Si!l' tlrl' 1 1lllll riP II' .,.,1,,, 111111 11f Audit H •I I~

l'W ry [ld i T

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SIX

engine, vinyl
top, power steer· ·
ing, air, lilt wheel.

CYlinder,

speed, winch .

....
••
r

Infant Russell

New arrival
Jeff Rn••all
Mr• and """"·
~ '

P~e~y,are~o~cingthemrth
of
theit first child, Jeffrey Ryan,
born on Feb. 12 at the Pleasant
Valley H011pital. The Infant weighed
eight powlds, 12 ounces and was 22
lncl)es long.
The maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mi-s. Ike Neal, Middleport,
lind the maternal great-grandfather
is the Rev. George Oller, Racine.
MB. Doro\hY J, Ruuell, Pomeroy, is
the paternal grandmother, and Mrs.
Helen Stewart, Mason, W.Va. is the
oatemai great·grandmotber.

3

13.896%

Education.

Substantial penalty for early
withdrawal.

• California Straights
• Super Straights
(Also Pre-Teen Sizes)

a
a

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Cl01HING HOUSE
Pomeroy, Oh.

Home

National

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MARGUERITE SHOES

3RD ST., RACINE, OH .

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I~

CAMARO

Sliver and black 2
tone , turnblne
wheels ,
rear
Spoiler, air.

FLORIST

PH·. 992·264'4

APRIL 17 &amp; 18
Sponsored by :
Meigs Co.
Humane society

6 Month Money Market

•
Your Children's

Your "Extra Touch"
· l'lor lst Since 1957 ·

JEEP CJ.5

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steering.

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tone tan and
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Spoiler Railey

car.

brown
beige
terior.
ment.

ONLY1
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2

Air, tilt wheel, road
wheels, beautiful

1979 OlDS
SUPREME

HEY KIDSI
WE'VE
. GOT

be in Meigs County

1977 CHM
CAMARO

1979 BUICK
REGAL LANDAU

Asunrise service will be held at
6 a.m. Sunday at the Middleport
Church of the Nazarene.
Following the service a breakfast
will be held in the Jijverboat
Room of the Diamond Savings
and Loan Co., West Main St.,
Pomeroy ..

Sgt. Gary M. Russell, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Lester Russell of Mason,
W.Va., has arrived for duiy at Scott
Air Force Base, Ill.
Russell, a computer operator, was
previously assigned at Offutt Air
Force Base, Neb.

'

"The Dealer That Cares About Quo~lity"

.

Sunrise s~rvices set.

Russell arrives for duty

Louks will appear in the United
States Achievement Academy Of.
ficial Yearbook published nationaly.
She is the dsughter of Jim and
Sharon Louks. Grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Louks,
Syracuse, and Mrs. Eloise Mankin,
Pomeroy.

RIVERSIDE
VW AMC JEEP RENAULT

Janet Swerlein, and Nial and
Dorothea Koehler.
All family, friends and neighbors
are invited to attend the open house.

Lori Louks

'22.50

Mark Abell of Rio Grande College
will be at the Middleport Library on
April 23 to talk about financial aid
: Prayer meeting Sunday for
students in both college and
·' A coounty·wide prayer meeting technical schools. The meeting
: will be held at 2 p.m. Sundsy at the which is open to the public will be
: Hysell Run Holiness Church 'with held at II a.m.
: Glen Bissell as class leader.

Anny Pvt. Kevin D. Keen, son of
: Virginia L. Keen of Coraopolis, Pa.,
· and Malcom L. Keen of Reedsville ,
· has completed basic training at Fort
: Jackson, S.C.
. During the training, students
: receive instruction in ·drill and
•ceremonies, weapons, map reading,
: tsctics, military courtesy, military
: justice, first aid, and Army history
· and traditions.

Area activities.noted
Mr. Cartoon and Beeper will be at
tile Meigs High School Auditorium at
2p.m. Saturday.
Spends weekend here
Featured on WSAZ-TV, Mr. Car·
loon will present a program of car·
Steve Walbum of Bristol, Tenn.,
loons, games aod will·meet with the spent the weekend here with his"
youngsters attending. The show will parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dale ~
benefit the Meigss Unit of the Walburn, his sister, Jill, and his new '
American Cancer Society and spon- niece, Brittany Jill, born on March
sors in addition to the unit are Bank 25.
One of Pomeroy, Central Trust Co.
of Middleport, Diamond Savings and
Loan of Pomeroy, The Fanners Magnolia meet cancelled'
Bank and Savings Co., Pomeroy and
the Racine Home-National Bank.
A meeting of the Magnolia Club
Admission is $2 at the door or scheduled for this evening at the
tickets may be purchased in ad· home of Ella Smith has been post- ,
vance at the Colonial Shoe Store in poned until April30.
New Haven; Gaul's Grocery in

PTA meeting cancelled

; Completes training

graduated from Bluefield , state
College in 1970 with a B.A. ~ In
Social Science. He ·graduated from ·
·New Orleans Baptist Tbeo
_ l""'cal
.
$emina1'Y in 1973 with a Masten of
Divinity degree, and in 1975 with a
Doctor of Ministry degree. 1
Dr. D.illon served aa rnlpJater of
MusicandYouthatFeliOWBbipBap- ·
list Chilrch, Princeton, W. Va. 18681968, and as pastor of the 1!811lechur·
ch 1868-1971; as pastor of New
Sharon Baptist Chuich, H1111111r, La.
1971-1974. He became pastor of the ·
. Grace Baptlst Church, SBC, Parkel'sburg, W. Va. in '1974, where he is
presently serving. · · ·
·~ '
Through the years, Dr. 'Dillon has'
been active in various
denominational posiUona. He aerved
as vice pesident, then later as
president of the West Virg!nia Convention of Southern Baptists; as
moderator, clerk, evangelism chair-"
man, and as youth director of Baplist Associations. He Is PresentlY the
clerk of the Inunanuel Association of
Southern Baptists.

The Daily Sentinei-P,ge-7

Award winner

A.STROGRAPH

I

MASON - The First Baptlst Chill'ch of Masori will conduct a revival
r1 of eetin ·
arid evangell8tic se es m . gs
beginning Mond8y, April 20, and
continuing through Satfl\'day, April
25. The meetings will begin at 7 p.m.
. each evening. '1'1\e church is Sf·
filiated with the Southern Baptist
Convention and the West Virginia
Convention of Southern Baptists. It
is seH-governing, owns its property,
and is an independent church, being
free from any ecclesiastical control.
It is located in Mason on U.S. High.
way 33, the main street through the
town.
Dr. Ronald G. Dillon, pastor ofthe
Grace Baptist Church, SBC, Parker:
sburg, W. Va.,willbetheevangelist
for the meetings. He was
.)une
29, 1948, in Matoaka, W..Va. He and
his wife, Elizabeth, have three sons,
Daniel, age 10, and Jonathan and
Peter (twins), age seven.
Dr. Dillon graduated from
Bluefield High School in 1966, and
from Bluefield College in 1968 with
an A.A. degree in Liberal Arts. He

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

.Dr. Dillon to preach

. Miss KeUy Smith
hon01U of party

Twelve Meigs Countians have
been named to the winter quarter
dean's list at Ohio University. To be
named students must have earned a
grade point average of 3.3 or better
and have earned 16 hours, 12 of
which were taken for a Jetter grade.
The Meigs County group mcludes
Kevin King, Route I, Middleport;
Don Michael Mullen, Middleport;
Larry Grover Fisher, Pomeroy;
Lance Kevin Oliver, Pomeroy;
Faith Perrin, Pomeroy; Lawrence
Pooler, Route 3, Pomeroy; Robert
Henry Roush, Jr ., Racine; Jeffrey
Paul Goebel, Route I, Reedsville;
Susan Lynn Goebel, Reedsville;
Karen Elizabeth Probert, Reed·
sville; Jana Kaye Burson, Route I,
. Shade; Margaret Marie Amberger
: and Leslie Jaye Ord, both of
: Syracuse.

Jhurlday. Aprll16,1981

352 E. Main, Pomeroy
Ytur FTO Florist

VISA'

For

Yoli

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See Our S(/113-

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OUR NEW ADDRESS WILL BE:

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I

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*
LOCATION
7:00 a.m. til 5:00 p.m.
Saturday 7:00 a.m. til 3:00.p.m.
PHONE 992-6611 or 992-2709
WATCH FOR GRI\.~~[1 OPENING SPECIALS!

"'nmes

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�.Page-8-The
:. ; ;:,; . .; . . ;,;.;,;.:;. :.Daily
.; .:,;. :. ;Sentinel
. ; .:,;,;.; ;,;.;_________________.;. .__. :,Pomeroy-Midclleport,
. : .;:; .:. :.:._; :.:.:.: :.:.:; .:; : :.:.:. Ohio
:.: .:.: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

. . -.-h-·

'

Thursday, Aorll16.1981

---~-

Pomeroy-M

Ohio

The Daily Sentinei-Pa

·Meigs ·county Easter
services announced
''

" UGIIT," a gospel group of VieODa, W. Va. will be performing with
the Rex Nelon Singers and the SlngingNorths on April24, 7:30p.m. at the
Point Pleasant High School. This group won the talent competition of the
National Quartet Convention at NashviUe, Tenn. in 1976 over 71 other
groups.

Rex Nelon Singers
feat~re of gospel fore
Agospel concert featuring the Rex
Nelon Singers will he presented on
April 24 at 7:30 p.m. in the Point
Pleasant High School.
Appearing with the Rex Nelon
Singers will he " Light" from Vienna, W.Va. and the "Singing Norths"
from MI. Orab,Ohio.
The Rex Nelon Singers is an Atlanta, Ga. group of musicians and
singers who record lor Canaan
Record Co. They have been on
leadin£ syndicated shows such as
the Gospel .Singing Jubilee, the
P.T.L. Club, and the Archie Camphell Show. and was also featured on

The spirit of Marlboro

A mother-daughter banquet was
planned for 6:30 p.m. on May 15 at
the Senior Citizens Center when the
Laurel Cliff Women's Fellowship International met recently at the home
of Mrs. Jani!ee Johnson.
Mrs. Sharon Folmer bad prayer to
open the meeting with Mrs. Doris
Shook conducting a study on "What

~ong Bottom
By Melody Roberts
Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Newlun recenUy vacationed in Nashville, Tenn.
with Mr. and Mrs. Sban Wells of the
NelsonviUe area. While they were
there, they bad a tour of the old
"Grand Ole Opry" building, the one
used for many years before the new
building was ocmpleted. Also, they
saw a show featuring Porter
, Wagoner, Tom T. Hall, Hank Snow,
Roy Acl!ff, Grandpa Jones, Ernest
Tubb, Jeanie Pruitt and others.
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsel Larkins and
· Kenneth were called on ·by Mr. and
Mrs. Steve Salisbury, Adam and
Aaron of Gallipolis and Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Larkins, Cheshire.
Mr. and Mrs. Millard Ball are
. vacationing with their daughter and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Buck Carver.
· The Carvers live around 20 miles

oro

LIGHTS
LOWERED TAR &amp; NICOTINE

sday program on Thursday night at
7:30p.m. The service of worship wiU
.include a filmstrip on "The
Passover and Betrayal." ·The St.
Paul's Easter ~unrise service is set
lor 6:30 a.m. Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. James Stout as directors.
The Chester United Methodist
Church plans a Good Friday s.ervice
at 7 p.m. Friday evening with the
youth in cbarge. Speaker ..will .be
Rev. Richard Thomas. The Chester
sunrise service will be at 6:30a.m.
Sunday with the U.M.W. in charge of
program. A full breakfast is planned
following the sunrise service.
The Long Bottom Community
Good Friday service will he at the
Long Bottom United Methodist
Church at 8 p.m. Friday with Rev.
Ric bard Thomas as the speaker. The
service will include communion. The
Eastern sunrise service will begin at
5 a.m. Sunday, with music by the
Reedsville Choir. Mrs. Harlis Frank
is program director. A light breaklast is scheduled.
The Hysell Run Holiness Church is
baving a sunrise service at 6 a.m. on
April19, also tbat day will he a Sunday School service at 9:30 and morning worship service. Tbat afternoon there will be' a County-wide
Prayer Meeting at 2 p.m. with Rev.
Bissell followed by Sunday evening
service at 7:30 p.m. tbat evening.
The pastor is Rev. Theron Durham.
The public is invited.
Sunrise service at Mt. Hennon
United Brethren Church will he at 6
a.m. with a breakfast in fellowship
ball at 7 a.m. Sunday school at 8:30
a.m. will he followed by morning
worship at 9:30 a.m. The pastor is
the Rev. Robert Sanders.

Book fair underway

AWARD- Pat Pauley, left, and Pam Holcomb, advisor, are pictured
with the award of merit awarded the Southern High School Future
Homemakers of America Chapter at the 1981 Ohio FHA/HERO state
meeting held at Veterans Memorial Auditorium in Columbus April!O and
11. The two represented Southern at the meeting which carried out the
theme "FHA/HERO - Building a Better You." Special features included
guest speaker, Norman Smith, and a film on Ronnie Consolo dealing with
her overcoming the handicap of not having arms or hands. 1981-82 officers were installed.

Social
Calendar
THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS BETTER
HEALTH CLUB, 1:15 p.m. Thursday at the home of Lottie Leonard.
Program by Mrs. Wilmetta Lerfheit,
contest by Lenora Leifheit.
MIDDLEPORT CHILD CONSERVATION LEAGUE, Thursday,
7:30p.m. at the home of Mrs. Susre
Soulsby. Karen and Steve Story will
speak on wills. Each member is
asked to take a guest and refres hments.
NEW LIFE CHOIR to sing at the
Holy Week revival now in progress
at the Syracuse Church of the
Nazarene, 7 p.m. each eve ning. Services will continue through Sunday.
The Rev. James B. Kittle is the
speaker. Public invited.

The Title I program of the Middleport Elementary School is sponsoring a book fair beginning
Tuesday evening at PTO night.
There will be books on display in
the caeteria that may he purcbased
during the evening. The books are
recommended lor Easter "basket
stuffers" with prices ranging from
35 cents to $5.95. The book fair will
Sunrise service
continue until Wednesday, April22.
Happens When Women Pray." Next
•
An Easter sunrise service will be
Children may view the books on
meeting wiU be held on April 28 at
held
at 6 a.m. at the Pomeroy
Tuesday and Wednesday and selling
the home of Mrs. Karen Stanley, 10
Wesleyan
Holiness Church , State
will start on Thursday for the young
a.m.
people. Posters, records, activity Route 143, Harrisonville Road. The
A luncheon was served by Mrs.
The United States Achievement books, coloring books and story Rev. Dewey King invites the public
Johnson to those named and Mrs. Academy announced tbat Melissa books will he on display.
to attend.
Evelyn Young, Mrs. Brenda Haggy, Scarbrough bas been named a .---:-----....:....-'----------------~
Mrs. Donna Gilmore, Mrs. Jean United States National Band Al"ard
Wright, and Mrs. Iva Powell.
winner for 1981.
Now Open For Spring Season
Melissa was nominated by
Eastern High School Band Director
.
James Wilhelm for the national
• Easter Flowers • Potted Mums e Lilies • Hydrangeas
award.
• Ca lad iums • Azaleas • Tulips • Daffodil s
from the Smokey Mountains in TenThe academy selects the USNBA
nessee. Mr. and Mrs. Ball drove winners upon the exclusive recomTO
down with their son and family, Mr. mendation of the band director and
and Mrs. Harold Ball of Columbus.
the official standards for selection
HANGING BASKETS
~,so··
Fred (Happy J Newlun is a patient set forth by the USAA. Melissa joins
6~ ', 8", &amp; 10 11
at the Holzer Medical Center.
other select bandsmen being so
Mrs. Tom (Cathy Pickens) Spen- honored.
cer is also a patient at the Holzer
.The criteria for selection includes
Medical Center.
musical ability, dependability,
SPECIALI While They last PANSIE~eg. 57 .00 a Flat 1
Flat
Ginger Hayman recently • citizenship, leadership, acade~lics,
celebrated her birthday. She is the enthusiasm, band director's recomOpen Daily 9 to 8, Sundays 1 to 5
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Tom mendation, pride in personal apHayman. She received many cards pearance, attitude and cooperative
and gifts.
spirit and r~sponsibility.
Melissa wiU appear in the United
Ph. 992-5776
Syracuse, Oh .
Recent overnight guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Francis Andrew was Mrs. States
ficial Achievement
Yearbook Academy
published
OfWayne (Kathy) Salkowitz of Canton.
nationally. She is the daughter of
Anyone interested in joining the Leslie and Ruth Ann Scarbroug~ and
Long Bottom 4-H club please phone the granddaughter of Flofl!nce
Beth Hayman at !IM-3509 or Mrs. Wyers, Reedsville, and J. W. ~ar­
Joanne Lawrenceat~l7.
brough, Long Bottom.

Mother-daughter fore
planned for May 15

in·alow tar cigarette.

Mar

·• broadP.M. Magazine, a nationally
cast show.
Tickets at $4 lor general admission, and $5 for reserved seats,
'are now available at the Middleport
Book Store, at Clark's Book and
Bible Store in Jackson; at Fruth
Pbarmacy and at the Appalachian
Tire Store in Point Pleasant; and at
the Fruth Pbannacy and the Faith
Book Store in Gallipolis.
Tickets will be available at the
door at 50 cents higher, and can he
reserved by telephoning 985-4253 or
446-9471, or by writing Concert
Tickets. Rodney.

There will be an Easter candlelight cantata Saturday at 7:30
p.m. by the New Life Choir. The
event will be held at the United Faith
Church in Pomeroy on the Rt. 7
.bypass.
There will be a sunrise service
Sunday morning at 6:30 p.m. at the
. Freedom Gospel Mi,ssion at Bald
Knob. There will also be Sunday
School at 9:30 a.m. and a Sunday
evening Easter program at 7:30
p.m. with the "Singing Cabelleros"
presenting the program. ·
The Dexter Church of Christ will
hold a Good Friday service and communion at 7 p.m. The church will
bave ·a sunrise service at 6:30a.m.
with.breakfast to follow. Church ser, vices wiU begin at 9: 30 a.m. The
minister will he Cbarles Russell.
The Tuppers Plains Church of
Christ will have a special sunrise
service this Easter Simday at 6 a.m.
All area churches who are not
baving their own early morning services are invited to celebrate the
resurrection of the Lord with them.
Coffee and donuts will be served after the service.
The Red Brush Church of Christ
will hold services Saturday evening
at 7:311 p.m. There will he Sunday
morning worship at 10 a.m. and Sunday evening services at 6 p.m. Denver Hill from Foster, W. Va . will be
guest speaker. Everyone is
welcome.
A special Easter service sponsored by the youth ·will he held at
7:30 p.m. at the Danville West Bend
Church. Minnie Thornton is in
cba rge. Everyone is welcome. Rev.
R. D. Brown is minister.
A sunrise service will be held at
6:30 a.m. Sunday at the Alfred
United Methodist Church with the
youth gup in cbarge.
The St. Paul's United Methodist
Church will hold a Maundy Thur-

Scarbrough
band award
wznner

Ck:
LJ..J

0

-a:::
ffi
t-

I

-

LJ

EASTER SPECIALS

News Notes

'600

Bedding Plants

IN ALL VARIETIES

The Lee Rider Patlchl
is the guarantee
of quality and
value you expect
from Lee.

5"!'

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE

Mrddle porl

~~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~::::::::::::::::~~::;::;::;~~~~~~~~

No one pays you more than
SAVINGS.

I·Month Money Market Certlflcrte

30-Month Money Market Certlflcat

.•'

multifaceted
shapes
for your
many-faceted ·
life

I

· SHOES AND GET
APURSE FOR

1h PRICE

Connie's shapely.
sculptured. faceted.
mid-heels enhance
your walking plea·
sure with incredible.
I Ottordable style. New
'I toppings present a
plentitutte of dressy
pizazz for a multitude of
occasiorls.

l

of_,,_

..

'

$10,000 minimum. Interest
may be paid monthly, quarterly, at maturity or transferred to a savings account.
Federal regulations prohibit
compounding of interest.

No minimum investment is
required. Interest will be
compounded continuously
from date of deposit to date
of withdrawal.

Ask about Pay-by-Phone/NOW and VISA.
No minimum balance. No service charges.

OlAMON) SAVNGS

btrftage bou.Gt
"•

12.00%

A aubttentllllnltrlll penal1, 11 required for earl,- wl thOrawal. "Etl~~tt lve annual yie ld Is based on reinvestment of principal and lntere1t 11 t

'

12 mg' 'rar:' O.B mg nicoune av. per cryarelle. fJ CRepor1 Dec ·)g

13.896%

Effective Annual Yield On

ml!urlly . lhlt II an annutl rtlt tubjtet to change 11 reriewtl .

2K DISOOUNT. TO All SENIORS

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determrned
That Cigarene Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health .

r

BUY APAIR OF

12.937%

ANl LOAN COIVPANV
People C&lt;&gt;unl :·· The_Diamrmd Differen.cr•

- -.
..
Hours: M., T., W. 9-5, Th. &amp; Sat. 9-Noon
ActouM...,.. tol100.000 by FSliC.
Fri. 9-6
216 W. MAIN ST.
POMEROY,OH.I
992-6655
~

Mhhllepert~
u

-·- ...

Ohio

�16,1981

1Continued froJJJ page 1)

Show Association . Kristin was
recently confirmed at St. Paul's
Lutheran Church.
PAM ELA CROOKS is co·
sponsored by the Xi Ganuna Mu
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
and the American Legion Auxiliary
of Feeney-Bennett Post 128. Mid·
dleport.
She is a member of the Middleport
First United Presbyterian Church
and at Meigs High School has been
active in the Pep Club, the Spanish
Club, the marching band and its flag
corps, the concert band . She is
president of the junior class , a rnem·
ber of the National Honor Society, on
the yearbook staff, an off ice
assistant and fnr all three years has
played on both the basketball and
softball teains. She was also active
for four years in 4-H.
SUSAN DANNE R 1s c&lt;&gt;-sponsored
by the Central Trust Ba nk of Middlepm1 and the Americcm Legion

Auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett Post
128, Middleport.
At Meigs High School she is a
member of the Nati onal Honor
Society, the marching and concert
bands, the choir, the F'uture
Homemakers of America and has
served on the junior prom cum·

mittcc. She has been in the school
musica l for two years. Her other activities include the Voices of Liberty
Chorus, ca ndystripe work at the
Pomeroy Hea lth Care Center, and 4H for tw o years. She IS Cl member of
the Galli polis Fi rst Baptist Church
and a member of tile Pr&lt;&gt;-Teens and
also serves as a teache r's aid for the
kinderga1t en deparllllenl of the Su n·
day school.
MELANIE Dl LLARD is cosponsored by Xi Gamma Mu Chat&gt;tel· and the middleport Auxiliary
unit.
She is a member of the National
Honor Society and the Spanish Clu b,
IS

on th ~

ht!r sophumore yea r, she was in the

junior prom cunu nittee,

an offi ce

Chnstian fellowship Club.
PHYI.I.IS DAVIS, alternate to the
deleg ates sponsored or cl}-sponsored
by the Middleport unit. She is a
member of the National Honor
Society. served on student council
fur a year, belonged to the Spanish
Cl ub for three yea rs, is an office
worke r. attendance recorder, and is
on the junior prom committee and
inv olved in other junior class activities .
Phy llis is a member of the Mid·
dleport First Baptist Church, the
Middleport Baptist Youth group
where she serves as secretary, the
youth choir, the adult choir, sings
with The Young Believers, and is a
Bible school teacher. She has been in
!1-H for four years, serving in various
off1ces.

assistant. a maJ orette with the mar·

ching band . pla ys in the concert
ba nd. and is on both the softball and
basketball teams.
She is a mem!Jer of Gral'e
Episcopal Church, the Glo-c lles
Balon Corps, and has been involve-d
ill 4·1-1 ctct iviti es for several yea rs.

She is a member of Pleasure R1ders .
TAMMY EI CHINGER 1s spon·
sored by U1e American Legion
Auxiliary of feen ey-Bennett Pos1
128, Middleport.
A member of the National Honor
Society, she is a candidate for the
Martin Essex School for the Gifted.
At Meigs Hi gh she has been a mem·
ber of the Pep Club. the Spanish
Club, and the concert band, has ser·
ved as vice p1·esident of the student

."

6 :0 0

M ark Twa 1n's c lassic tal e ot two
bo ys. one a prmce .lhe o th erlhe son
u t a begga r . born on th e same day
an d de sl1n ed to l ook al ik e Wh en
ta t e b r1ngs t hem to ge ther . they
d e Cide to sw1t ch places.

'

CAP!'AIN EASY
DO~J'T TRY TO I~Tt!ll:FE'RE
..you LITTLI: V I ~Er.J l

6o30

_GARDE'N CENT R---.i'
"

6o58
1o00

BORN LOSER

I

li?EALI'Z:~

UH ",'bJ \lt!Ut.DI.l'T
BY NJYGH~
HAV~ f&gt;.. LIST OF

.

IT'S t.b1 eASY
m~

'W~WULDJP

G:C0D N...L
'l'OC TIM~,
Hlf-R'(N.)0.

KM2000

Save $15
Our Reg . 59.88

7o30

.""

..........

44.88 (3)

&lt;I· Cu. Fl. Wheelbarrow ·
Heavy -duty steel
with wood handles.

..

,, '

ANNIE

THE MONEY
DOEGH'T 1\ATTER.
MY NEEii5 ARE
FEW· MY OIIE

·-AHOA FELLOI'IWITlWHLY
00,
OOE LOVE CAN'T FOOL BUT YOO'RE
AROUND. HE ljAS TO BE GRtATLY
FAITHFtJL TO THAT
RE5PECTED,
LOVE OR HE HA5
DR. LIKII~I.
HOTHIN&amp;!
•

RESPECTED, PERHAPG, B(Jf HEY" OR. SUE IS
NOT Li~ EO.• !' VE
GREAT AT THAT!
SOMEHOW NEVEr?.
I'LL BET SHE COULD
BEEN tliJCH GOOD TEACH YOUHOW T'
AT PERGONAL
00 IT.1
RELATIOHSHI f!&gt; ...

J

II

•

••

Briggs and
Stratton' Engine

Save
at
Kmart

YES , BUT 1 WANT

(4)

Save 9.09

TO E XPLAIN IIBOUT
MOO . .

Our Reg. 37 .97

28.88

Cordless Trimmer ~
Electric . 6" cut. nylorv:

co rd .. charger. Save! :
'

KM1000
That's a lot o' hotca~es
fer jes' one

•

'.'

person!

Save $24 (2)

Save $11 ( 1l

40U

mind

88.97

•

95.97

Our
99.97

Rover

Our
119 .97

a

spell?
Savel Sale Price ( 5)

1. '

•

3-HP 20" Power Lawn Mower

22" 3 112-H.P. Mower

'-

Recoil-start rotary mower has throttle
control on the handle. Save now.

Side discha rge. 3'12 -H.P. Briggs and
Stratton· recoil-sta'rl engine. Thr ottle on
handle . 8" w heels, height adjusters.

\

.'-

.
...

.
PHYU..IS DAVIS

13.88

Electric 9" Trimmer
Manual-feed. takes

!lll•..• • • • • •..llii.Oil5iiiOI.ist

DENISE TIJRNER

WINNIE

line.

40 LDI. Nel WI .

THAT'5

...

•oRJHo

20·Lbo. Net wl.

EXACTLY/

RIGHT...

CON'SUELO DOESN''T
KNOW WHO HER

CHECK lliE LOCAL
ORPHANAGE.lliEY
MAY BE ABLE
TO HELP

REAL MOTHER IS.
YQUR A'\PERS

WERE

SIMPLY
FOUNt:&gt; ON HER
AS ·AN INFANT/

Our Reg . 2.87

Our Reg. 1.47

1.97 (

6)

Odorless Manure
Non-bu rning. weedfree cow manure

YOU .'

Our6.86

1.09 (

7)

7.47

{9)

Dressing Top Soli

(S}
Sphagnum Peal Moll ..~~·Lt~.· Organic Peal

For enric he d lawns
and gardens.

4-cu-ft. Excellent
moistUie retainer.

5.27
Wnd 8-Gon

BARNEY

CIO)

l

•

'1

lawn. garden. snrllno/11 Lawn weed killer.
\ t
Contains 2, 4·0 &amp;

EVENING
2 11) 17 10 18 li1_Q).(t t} ID NEWS
3
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
!CONTINUED FROM DAYTIME)

4 ) THE PRINCE AND THE
PAUPER , PART I ' The Pauper King '

•-'

7 o58
BoOO

51
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRiENDS
1@1 ABC NEWS
' 9 1 RAINBOW'S END
11 l OVEREASY Guest : RogerBald ·
wm Host Hugh Down s. {Close d·
Captioned : U .S.A.)
12 10 11 1 NBC NEWS
5 &lt;BOB NEWHART SHOW
6 • PROGRAM UNANNOUNCED
0 16 111QJ CBS NEWS .
9 1 WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
,1J J LILIAS, YOGA AND YOU
121G) ABC NEWS
I 3 I CBN UPDATE NEWS
• 2 I 0 PM MAGAZINE
13 1 WEEKEND GARDNER
· 4 1 THE PRINCE AND THE
PAUPER , PART II "Th e Mer c iful
Law Of The Kmg' Prm c e Edward IS
re scued fr om a band of lh1 eves by a
sold1 er o t lor tune . Belle'.lingthatthe
boy IS truly o t roy al bl oo d, the so ld ier str1v es ro re turnh1m to hi sright ·
rut pla c e as he1r to th e thro ne
5 1 ALLIN THE FAMILY
6 11 12) lit FAMILY FEUD
7 r BACK STAGE ATTHE GRAND·
OLEOPRY
O r B r TIC TAC DOUGH
19 1 111 1
MACNEIL-LEHRER
REPORT
i1QJ NEWS
12 10BULLSEYE
i 3 ! PROGRAM UNANNOUNCED
5 I SANFORD AND SON
&amp; ri!J I BI JOKER' S WILD
. 1 I HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
, 9 I DICK CAVETT SHOW
1101 MATCH GAME
(111 DICK CAVETT SHOW Gue st
Pe te r Shalle r. playwright.
112\G) FACE THE MUSIC
· 3 1 CBN UPDATE NEWS
· 21 0
MOBIL SHOWCASE
NETWORK PRESENTATION 'The
St!v en D•a Is My s tery . One o f Aga th ·
d Chr JS!I e "s be s t thrill e rs ab o ut
•n e.-.p l1 ca bl e murd ers . h c kmg
c l oc k s and dar kly ve1l ed sec ret
soc 1et1es St ars Cheryl Campbe ll.
James Warw1ck
31 MISSIONARIES IN ACTION
4 MOVIE ·lCOMEDYJ •• " Hog
Wll~ " 19BO
5 I MOVIE ·(COMEDY)••• " Don 't
Give Up The Ship" 1959
r 61 1121 li) MORK AND MINDY
Grand ma Cora ·s JOyous v1sitturns
to gloo m when she g ets mugged in
th e p ark , b ut M ork turn s the das·
t ard ly deed 1111 0 a ma dca p c aper
wh !l nhea nd gra ndma JOin forces to
ev en the score
• 7 1 BUCK ROGERS
ft(8 1. 10) CHECKING IN Flore nc e.
Lyle B loc k a nd t he1 r st a ll s are
cli mbmg t he ..... ail s alt er a rowd y
too tba llt ea m. c oa ch ed b y Ly le ' s
oJ i d t11y h sc hoo l nemes rs . c heck s
•nt o th e St. Fre de r1c k
' 91 SEARCH FOR SOLUTIONS
· Ev 1d ence. Pat terns and ln\leS tlga ·
t1on· In th iS pre m1e re ep1 so de tt1 e
subJ ec ts e.-. pt ored are patte rns in
e veryday lit e tha t help us d1sc ern
the mt orma t10 0 we ga the r, and tt1e
b as ic pro c es s of o bs er v ing.
(Ctose d·Cap11o ned. U.S .A.) (60
rnm s.)
111 1WORLD 'W es t Bank S tory ' per·
haps no p1 e ce o tt and has been th e
subtec t ot s uc h mte nse con·
t;o ve rs v W1lh Israeli el ec tions
~..o O m 1 n g up . Wil h more 1nd1C 8IIOOSOf
a PL O s tra teg y o l terror. wit h nego·
t1a 11 ons und erwa y O¥er tl s future we
II)Uk at the h uma n s tory ottwo peol) les tay1ng cia1m to th e sa me bit of
land . the w est B an k .

8o30 r 3 1 SOUND OF TRUMPETS
0 18 11IQJ PARK PLACE
121G) BOSOM BUDDIES Kip rs
t nntt e.CI when h e tmall y t ak es the
b t:au l 1fui Sonny o ul on the town- an
~:: v e nmg w1th roomma te Henry and
h •s p unk rock blmd d ate thaf" s rid ·
dt ed by 1ncredib te di Sast ers
(R ep eat)
ao58, 13 1 CBN UPDATE NEWS
9 o00 3 r 700CLUB
fl l FRIDAY NIGHT MOVIE "The
F 11th Musk ete er ' 1979 Star s: Be au
B r 1dges, Ursula And re ss.
1 THURSDAY NIGHT AT THE
MOVIES ·f am•l y Plot' 1976 Stars:
Karen Bl ac k, Bru ce Dern.
0 IB] (iQJ MAGNUM, P.t Under
o rd1n aryc 1rcum st anc es . Thomas
M a gnum goes a ll ou t to he lp his
c t1 e nt s. bu t en t e rmg a marathon
sw1m, run and b ik e race 1s going too
tar (60 m1n s.)
19 11 11) SNEAK PREVIEWS Hosls
G ene S1sket and Roger Eb erttake a
lOO k a t anenco urag1ng new tre nd at
the bo.-. oll1ce · f ilms about families
w1th scenes fro m ·ordina ry Peo·
p te .' "Th e Grea t Santin i," and
"Kramer vs. Kramer. '
11~ G) BARNEV MILLER Com ic al
turmo 1l en gulls the 12th precinct
when a new det ec t1ve sp ark s caretn tea lous y •n Q fl ,cer Le ¥itl . then
dro ps a bombshe ll by acc us ing h1s
tel low 1nvest 1gat ors of being on the
tak e
{Repeat:
C lose d·C apt •o ned)
9 :30 I 4 \ MOVIE ·(DRAMA I ••• l'o " Eo-

capt From Alcatraz " 1979

JUGHAID !! WHAT TOOK

MY PLANE

' VOU 50 LONG TO GIT A
DRINK OF WATER?

WUZ LATE

I 8Hi i). TAXI L ouie tries to steer
hi S wa y to ro ma nce w1th a pretty
new dover. but wind s up with a $ 1
milll.on ta w s u1t when he pilots the
c a bmt o a111tie old l a d~ as shestep s
oil a c urb.

I I GOOO NEIGHBORS
11 1 THIS OLD HOUSE Bob V ila
s1tes up th e lle e culling and clear·
•n g rob an d d is c usses th e wood
bea m fr ami ng a nd the s tairwa y
\Ciosed ·Capti oned: U .S.A.)

9 o55 15) TBS EVENING NEWS
10o00 ' 8 \(11\ G) 2D-20 Hugh Downs an·
cho1s th1 a week ly maoaz•ne prolil·
1n g notew orth y eve nt s in news .
sc1enc e and e nter1amment. (60

mma.)

( 11}

7.68
Fruil Trees

{12)

Our
10 .97

5' ·6' variety to
choose from.
Our 12.97 116) 8.97

JEANETI'E COOK

'

VICKY DPBORD

(13)

11.88
Shade or FIDwlrinl Tree
Our

16.97

from dlf·
terent varieties.
ChOOse

39~ Ea.

Mkt.
Pock

hclclng Plants
Flower Ond vegetable plonl1 special.

sr

···-

Cl4)

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Flowering mum In

.... pot.

2.27

~---

S(HOOL
CR0551N6

(lS)

A Vlritty to Clloose '

form,Save.

sc•oo1.

USE
ONLY AS
DU~ECTED

&amp;"......,Butut

185 UPPFR RIVER ROAO. GAIIIPOllc)

(

CJ
c:J

SLOW

i

01 1 1 11~ NURSE Maryloaolound·
ed by the unexpec tedly neqative
reaC tiOI'I ot a d eal hospital em·
pl oye' to the news that an opera·
!ton may re store his hearing. (60
m1n1.)
11 1
COUSTEAU OOYSSEY
'C a l yps O' s Sear ch For Atlant is'
Pa rt II Ja c que s Cousteau diga
deep e r Jnt o" th tt Atlanti s legend
wh ~:t n he tu pl ore s Pse ira , 011
C rettt s northern coast (60 mms.)
II NEWS
10o28 13 ' ~BNUPDATENEWS
10o30 2 I.
STUNTIIEN

l f11l LESSoN
II OUTER LIMITS
10o58 l · C8NUPOATENEWS

ljjfjjf.\.{}fii}1t ~THATSCRAMBLEDWORDGAME

~ ~ ~(.!;1~ 11,
Unsc1amo1e these lour Jumbles,
one lener to eac h sq uare. ro torm
tour ardmary words

I

APR . 16, 1981

I!Rf SA•·
SA fl!

c•ace

ser ved un st udt•nt r ounci\,
IS

'

council, and majorette, both captain
VICKY DE,BORD, !lfiddleport wbere she was selected both the out- she has serVed autatistlcian for the · She attends the Flatwocids
and featured twirler, for three Auxiliary alternate, is on the Meigs · standing freshman a11d outstanding boy's basketball team and·the boys' Methodist Chlirch where~ i8 'an
vears. She is a member of the Gil}- Student Council, and is secretary of sophomore ba11d member. $he is a baseball team and is manager of the assistant Sunday .school teacller,
~ltes Baton Corps, and is a baton her junior class. She has played member of both the marching and girls' track team.
iwd a nine-year member of the f-H
twirling instructor. Tanuny is a volleyball and basketball for three concert bands, field commander for
KATIILEEN PARKER; also a in dairy and other projects. Shills
member of the Pomeroy United years, and has been on. the track the past two years and played in the MiddlepOrt Auxiliary alternate to a!sq a member of the Rock~
Methodist Church. .
team for th~past three years. Vicky jazz band for one year.
Girls' State, is a 10 year member of Grange, the Modern Woodmen&lt;of
LAURA SMITII is sponsored by isamemberoftheMt. Union Baptist
She served on the student council - theGiriScoutsandinl9110recelveda · America, the ·American and oluo
the American Legion Auxiliary uf Church and has been in 4-H for six for two years and on the yearbook Wider Opportunity to New Yotk and Jersey Cluba.
.
:
Drew Webster Post39, Pomeroy.
years.
staff for three years serving as copy New Jersey. She is a member of the
DENISE TURNER Is' also a r.jidShe is. a member of the National
LYNNE OLIVER, Middleport editor for the past two years. Meigs Future Farmers of America, dleport Auxiliary alternate. ' At
Honor Society and at Meigs is active Auxiliary alternate, is a member of Besides playing on the girls' basket· holding offices at both the· chapter Meigs she.. is a l1lelllber , of the
m the band, basketball, track, and theNationaiHonorSocietyatMeigs ball team for ,the past three years, anddistrictlevels.
·
(Contmuedonpagei4)
played volleyball one year. She is r-----------------'------~---:---------"""7------_:_------~also a meml,&gt;er of the Junior
.. . •
•
American Legion Auxiliary,
..
· .. .. .
~
Pomeroy unit, and attends the
OPEN DAILY J0-9;
Laurel Cliff F'ree Methodist Church.
r, Of
If
Alternates are: Southern High
CLOSED EASTER
1i'he Sa"l'ng
~
911
School : Sh~rry Beegle, daughter of
"''
rt.
lol5
;,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Beegle, Racine,
SUNDAY
"
Cook,Meigs
daughter
of Mrs.: JKathryn
and
HighSchooi
eanelte
Cook , Shade ; Vicky DeBord,
da ughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dallas
DeBord, Pomeroy: Lynne Olivet,
da ughte1· of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Olive!', Pomeroy ; Kathleen Parker,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leland
Parke r, Pomeroy ; Phyllis Davis,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Randall
Davis, Middleport ; and Denise Turne r, da ughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Tumel'. Pomeroy.
SHE RHY LYNN BEEGLE, alter·
na te to Mi ss Sioter, sponsored by the
American Legion Auxiliary of
l{acine Post 602, is president of the
Southern jumor class. She 1s a mem·
ber of the hcoir, the pep club, the
National Honor Society, and the
student council and works on the
year book staff. She takes jazz dan·
L'i ng lessons frorn Carpenter's Studio
in Racine.
JEANETTE COOK is alternate to
Laura Sm1th. del egate from the
Ame rican Legion Auxiliary of Drew
Webster Post 39. Pomeroy. She is a
member of the National Honor
Society and an offi ce aide. During

Television
•
•
VIeWing

.,•'

Auxiliary units name delegates, alternates to ·event

The Da1

Ohio

Thursday, April16, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-10- The Daily Sentinel

~

byHenriArnoldandBob Lee

1'' 1have
to ho le up

tx
I IJ
)

here tor
a while

LAWRC

\• ,

t
l I I J

FROOL

~~(JF3jHI 0

'THE Cfii:OOK SAWED
OFF THE i.EGS
UNDE~ HIS SED 50
COULD DO THIS . .

E1.Il tJ
1

8

Now arrange tne or cted tet1er s 10
torm the surpr1se an swer. as sug ·
gesteo by tne .above cartoon

"[I I JK I X]"

Print answer here:

(Answers tomonowl
Jumbl es COUGH
A n~ w e1

FUSSY

MOTHER

CALI CO

W hat a o'\' Oll ln¥1!ed a g 1rt tor -

SCO f CH

~

SOFA

Jumble Book. No. 113. conta1nH1401110 puules. IS nadabl e lor S1.75 postpaid
from Jumble . Cio 1t11s newspaper. Box 34 , Norwood, N.J. 07648. Include your
name. add1 ess. ZIP code and mak e checks payable to N.ewspaperbooks.

BRIDGE
Trap handily sidestepped
By Oswald J a&lt;·oby
and Alan Son lag

NORTH
4-16-81
• 73
• A K B6
• 7 52
KQ 7 4
WEST
EAST
• 652
• J 9 5J
• Q 10 7 2

Here ts a very Sl mp lr h&lt;Jnd
South dec1de!-i to npt• n fuur

+

spades and no om• i'lst.• t &lt;J n
find a b1d
Wes t

opt•ns

t hc

HI

.A

ol

diamunds. East l&lt;Ake s has &lt;t L"t'
and relUrn s the four spot

tl0986 j

So uih b on lead and 11 South "
a sim ple soul. he promptl v

+9 53

SO~ TH

lea ds uul Ius lu ng ol t ru m ps.

.K QJ \0 984

West tak es ht~ ace &lt;And
leads another di &lt;~ m o nd E&lt;:~ st
ru ffs and 1:1 gor ng tu m &lt;A k e ht s
at e uf d ubs l&lt;Her along tn th L•

t K QJ

+6 2

plav

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

A sltgllll y de v1uus South
lea ds his ei~hl of spad&lt;•s 1n Ih&lt;'

hope !hOI 11 Wes l hold s ace
and one spade. he Will duek
and g1vt.· So uth

it t: ha nr-t&gt; t o get

1n two qutck trum p lettds
A bndge-pl ;mn g So ul h
realizes th a t there is n u 1me

holdin g a gun to hb hea d

Ea st

Soulb

Pass

Pa ss

Pass

4.

•

rubber.

c o ur se. hearts m tgh t
that c a se . fate is
ttga tnst So u t h and hE' ts

be ruf!ed
He lhen pl a ~·!'i
dummy·s &lt;t('l'· ktng ol he &lt;Ht s 1n

Ut

brea k 7-1. In

to dt sC"&lt;A rd th a t b t,lh er ·
Th ~ n

Norlb

arter trumps and seor es his

LJ gatnst him and that hts
rema tmn g high diamond can
urdcr

West

Opening lead·t l 0

10

.fo r ce him to lea d a frum p at
that ti me He n ot es th at there
i s a strong pusst bil ity th a t dt et ·
mund s ar e brea ktng ~ - 2

somt.• dtamond

.,

t A4
+A J 10 B

doomed from th e start

ht• gm.•s

1-------- - - -- - -- -- - -- - -

t~~diJ.. ~ t rt'
by THOMAS JOSE'H
ACROSS
4 Forest
1 Thoroughfare
creature
5 Out of fashion 5 Slain
IO Competent
6 Revise
II Foreshadowed 7 Asian
I3 Acertain
hotiday
8 Viscera
number
9 Convention
14 Annoy
member
15 Encourage
Yesterday's Alllwer
I% The "D"
17 Elec. unit
I8 Be weD
in FDR
24 Coach's
Z9 Greek island
18 Card
concern
:It Declivity
- of
19 Moslem title 20 Native soil 25 Go wool
33 Lasso
20 Safety spot 21 Liqueur
gathering
34 In balance
23 Indian title 2% E1-&lt;ii
%7 Hardy's
35 Mar on a car
24 Specie
23 Byre sound
partner
37 - jacet
25 Very (mus .)
26 E1clude
%7 Untied
%8 Matter .(law )
Z9 Philippine
pe8!1Allt
30 Frothy drink
31 Five score
31Foam
38 Nomadize
39 Complete

to Ready for
business

. u Type

of picture
4% Conf!ned
DOWN
!Imprudent
2 Hautboy
3 Before mater
I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXIl
II L 0 N G J1 E 'L L 0 W
One leiter oimp]y stands for another. In this aample A II
used for the three L's, X for Ihe two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes. Ihe length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code !etten are dlllerenl.
CRYPTOQUOTES
QZM

MGEVC

ZG NM

AFYS

WFERURA
UR

QZMUE

Z F DE I
WFDQZ.

S •0 Q B Z
I G C U R A
Cryploqaote: ECONOMY IS HALF THE BATI'LE
OF UFE ; IT IS NOT SO HARD TO EARN MONEY. AS TO
SPEND IT wELL.-8PURGEON
Ya~y's

Hair cuticle
DARIEN, Conn. (AP) - 'The outermost layer of the

human hair shaft Is called the cuticle.

When that layer Is nat and smooth, it reflects Ught
and gives hair luater. When it becomes worn by too
much brllahing or too much heat during blow drying,
hair tends to become dull and to spilt at the ends.
Aeroeol spray luateriz«s are designed ..,edflcally to
protect the e~;tlcle ~yer, sa)'ll the Aeroeol PacUclnc
" Council.
•'

. ..

�Page- 12-The Da11y Sentinel

Apple Grove News Notes
,.

By Mn Hetbert Roush
Mr and Mrs Dorsa Parsons
called at the Crow-Russell Funeral
Home at Pomt Pleasant to pay their
respects and VISit the farruly of
Brycel Knapp of Leon, W Va . who
passed away Funeral serv1ces were
held Thursday at the Srruth Chapel
Church at Leon, W Va w1th 10·
terment m the cemetery nearby
Recent weekend VISitors of Mr
and Mrs Jack Ables, VICki and
M1chael, and helpmg the Ables
celebrate thetr wedding anmve rsary
were Mr and Mrs Larry Ables, Mr
and Mrs Paul Ables, all of Colurn·
bus , Mr and Mrs Ron Ables of
Thurston Paul and wife rema10ed
ttll Monda)
Mr and Mrs Bob Russell of Wolfpen were recent dmner guests of Mr
and Mrs Ronald Russell and
children, Mandy and Michael
Mrs Lou1se Wandhng of St
Albans vtstted Mr and Mrs Dorsa
Parsons recently
Mrs Gertte Manuel and ch1ldren,
Demse and Troy and Cathy Cross of
Rac10e vtstted Mr and Mrs Arnold
Hupp and Mr and Mrs EddJe Hupp
and Jeremy recently at Portland
Funeral servtces were held at the
local Methodist Church recently for

Dav1d Todd Rhodes, a former
resident, who passed away at the
home of his daughter, Mrs Ins
Fnend m Pittsburgh March 24 Rev
Freeland NorriS of Racme had
charge of the servJCes and mtennent
was m Letart Falls Cemetery by the
Ewmg Funeral Home Attending
serv1ces from a distance were his
daughter, Mrs Ins Fnend and
daughters, Fatth Fnend and Mrs
Dorothy Wnght of Pittsburgh, and
Mrs Mary LoUISe Scherer of
Charleston, W Va Food wsa
prepared and served to the farruly
and fnends m the annex of the chur·
ch by Mrs Dolly Wolfe, Mrs Luc1lle
Rhodes, Mrs Bess Parsons, Mrs
Bemtce Roush, Mrs Herbert Roush,
Mrs Donna Htll Mrs Shirley Ables
and VtckJ and Mrs Golda He10ey
Mr and Mrs Don Bell, Mr and
Mrs John Cheney dmed at tile
Western S1zzhn' Steak House 10
Athens a recent Sunday m observance of thetr wedd10g an·
ruversanes Mr and Mrs Bruce
Hart of Colwnbus spent a weekend
wtth her parents, Mr and Mrs Bell
and also helped them celebrate
Mr and Mrs Bruce Hart VISited&lt;
Saturday evemng wtth Mr and Mrs
Bob Hart at Racme

Mr and Mrs Don ShripUn and
son, Mr. and Mrs Bruce Shriplln
and three children of Warsaw spent
a recent Sunday w1th Mr. and Mn
Charles Burn
Mr and Mrs Charles Bum were
busrness VISitors at Huntington
recently and also shopped at the new
Huntmgton MaD.
Mandy Russell, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs Ronald Russell was a
surg1cal patient at Holzer Medical
Center at Galliolis Tuesday through
Thursday VJSJtmg her there were
Mr and Mrs Ronald RusseU and
son, Michael, Mr and Mrs Dana
LewiS, Mr and Mrs Russell Roush
Mr and Mrs Herbert Roush
vtsJted Mr and Mrs Dana LewiS a
Sunday evemng at Clifton
Recent VISitors of Mr and Mrs
Ronald Russell and children, Aman·
da and Michael were Mr and Mrs
Bob Russell, Mr and Mrs Don
Russell, Mr and Mrs Steve Haggy
and children, Stephame and Brad,
Davtd Roush of Manchester, Ed
Roush, Cmdy Roush, Mr and Mrs
Russell Roush
Mr and Mrs Herbert Miller have
purchased the home of the late
Margie Hunt and have moved there
from the res1dence of Mr and Mrs
Paul Etch at Pomeroy they were
assJsted m movmg by theJr sons, Mr
and Mrs Jeff Miller of Middleport
andSkJpMillerofRedHouse, W Va

_____________

e

~die,

Carpenter Personals
Ida Demson, who hu spent the
)JIJSt three months In Colwnbus with
Mr and Mrs. Johh Knotts, wu at
her mobile home here on Sunday,
then accompanied Edith Talbert to
her home near Salem Center and
spent several days there before
returning home.
Paul Henry Townaend, Columbus,
was an overnight guest of hta
COUSliiB, Mr. and Mn. Arthur Gra~
tree.
Bryan Jordan and friend spent
sprmg break from clas'lell at Ohio
Uruvers1ty m Florida visiting hta
grandparents, Mr. and Mn. William
CulweU, Pomona Park, Fla.
,Max Crabtree, Annanda, Mich ,
was an overnight gueat of his cousin,
Madge Dye Other relatives who
gathered at the Dye home alter the
fwleral of her cousm, VU"ginla Vlllson Townsend at Temple Uruted
Methodi!t Church, were Mn EDZle
DaviS and daughter, Katherine Fetty, Parkersburg, W. Va.; along with
Mr and Mrs Arthur Crabtree and
Mr and Mrs Thad Dye and
children, local
Mr and Mrs Clinton Gilkey,
Albany, VIsited their son-lll-law and
daughter, Mr and Mn. Walter Jor·
dan and sons The Gilkeys recently

____:._~

secretary llld Melta i T

Fllher, treuurer, are the aftlceri' - ··
for1811.
;.
Mr. and Mn Ronald Whittington ,

returned from spending three mcm-

ths In Florida. Other recent guesta of

have returned home alter a vacation '"' "
In Florida, They were ovei'nlglt · ••
j!Uesll of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Sw~ -r":.
at Largo and Mr and Mrs. Lewil 1 ,~,
Hill at St. Petenburg. They spent
some time with his uncle and aWlt, '" "'
Mr and Mrs EaArl Reedy at • c
Melbourne and called on John "u
Rawlings In Jacksonville u they ::
were enroute home
• ·•

the Jordans were Karen Gilkey,
Athens and Lincoln Russell, Wolf
Pen.
The BWJY Bee Society of the Carpenter Baptist Church met with Mn
Gordon Perry. Mrs. Ru Cheadle led
devoti0111 Election of officers was
held. Vivian Gaston, president; Bonrue Cheadle, v1ce president: Ida

Pubhc NOtiCe

m n1 stra to r
Guy
H
Ne gl er
Ra e ne Oh 10
45771 233 74
Mann 10g D Webster 114
Butt er nut
Av e nue ,
Pome roy Oh10 45769, Ma r
c h 16 1981 Executor Elsa
B K1mes, Middleport Oh1o
, 5760 1337 5
Glad ys Hemey , •1340
Coolville Road Reedsville
Dock et 2,
Paoelj' OhiO ;5772 Ma rch 27, 1981
ro Carl R Hys ell Juvent e Ad m1 n 1 s tr a tr~ x
Emmet
t-'robat1on Offtc er of Me1gs Ray He1 ne y 42J40 CoolVIlle
County Oh10
Road
Ree dsv1lle Oh1o
You are com m anded to ;5771 13391
no11t y Br enda Fr y address
Mar y Darst Route 1
unknown t he mot her of Chesh1 re Oh10 4.5620 Ma r
Janna Evans a child age 3 ch 31 l9Bl , Ad m1 n1stratr1 x
years D 0 8 July 20 1977
Leonard G1l more Route 1
that a com pt a1 nt has been M&gt; ddl eport
Oh1 0 ; 5760
lded '" th1S Cour t al legmg 23386
J err y F Powell 1811Y
!hal Janna Evans appear s
to be a neg lect ed a nd Ta nne r s
Run
Ro a d
depe nde nt ch1 ld
Rae me, Oh1 o 4577 1 Apr1 19
rt 1S req ues ted that per 1981 Exec utor Clara J
ma nent c ustody be gr an Powell R D 2 Rac1ne
ted Perma nent custody Oh o 45771 13354
means tha t the parent s
g u ard 1an
or
o th er 1• 1 16 13 30 Jtc
cus tod1a n may be per
manent ly d1ves ted ot a ll
Public Not1ce
p aren tal
r1ghts and
pn v1 teges m r es pect to the
PUBLIC NOTICE
ch ild and tha t the c hild
IN THE
may the n be pla ced for
COURT OF
adopt1 on w1 thout the con
COMMON PLEAS
sen t of the pare nts, gua r
JUVENILE
d1an or othe r custod1an
DIVISION,
ll 1s orde red tha t they ap
MEIGS COUNTY
pear personal ty before the
OHIO
Cour t at Pome roy Oh10 on
SUMMONS
the 21st day of Ma y 1981 at
case No 23181
11 00 o cl ock A M Further
1t IS ordered that the pe rson Docket 2,
hav1 ng ph ys ,c al custody or
Prtae 553
r.o Carl R Hy sell
control of sa1 d child shall
br&gt; ng lh e c h1l d to the Juvenile Probafton Off1cer
hea rm g A per son so of Me1gs County Oh1o
not1f ed, who fa11 s to ap
You a re commanded to
pea r ma y the n be pun1 shed notif y Bre nda Fry address
unknown a nd Ronald Fry
as 1n other c ases of con
tempt of cour t
Sr addr ess unknown the
Any pa rt y 1S ent ti ed to mot her and fath er of
counsel 1n the proceed1 ngs Rona ld Fr y Jr that a
and the Court w1 11 a ppo nt compla1 nt has been fil ed 10
th1s Court at1eg 1ng that
counsel If the party 1S m
Rona ld Fr y Jr a child age
d1ge nl
Sa1d Ca r l R Hysell wil l 8 yea rs D 0 B August 17
ma ke due re turn of th 1s 1972 appear s to be a
wr 1t on or before the lBth ne9.1ec ted a nd dependent
c hil d
day of May 1981
It 1S reques Ted tha t per
W1tness my hand and the
sea l of sa 1d Court th 1s 13th manent custody be gran
ted Perma nen t custody
day of Ap r I 1981
means tha t the parents
ROBE RT E BUCK
oth e r
JUDGE g u a r d1a n o r
By Ja net E Morn s custod1 an may be per
Ch•ef Deput y Clerk ma nently d1 ves ted of all
par e nt a l r 1ght s and
1•1 16 ftc
pr1vde ges 1n res pect to the
ch ild and tha t the child
ma y then be pl a ced lor
PubliC NOtiCe
adopt1 on Without the con
sen of the parents guar
NOTICE ON
d1 a n or ot he r custod1an
FILING OF
INVENTORY AND
It 1s ordered that they ap
APPRAISEMENT
pea r personally before the
The State of Oh1o Me1gs Court at Pome ro y Oh 10 on
County Court of Common the 21st day of May 1981 , at
11 00 o cloc k A M Fu rther
Pleas Probate Otvi SIOn
1t IS Ordered that the person
To the Executors or Ad
mmrstrators of the esta tes. h av 1n g th e phys ic al
to such of the fo llowmg as c ustod y or contro l of sa1d
a re reSide nts of the Sta te of c hlid shall br ing the c h1 ld
Oh10 v z - the sur1.1 1V1 ng to the hea r~ng A pe rson sa
spouse the nex t of km, the not1 1 ed who fa11 s to ap
benei1 C1 ar1 es under the 1pea r ma y then be pun1 shed
Will and to the attorney or as 1n othe r cases ot con
a ttorneys r~p r eseon t1ng a ny te mpt of Court
Any part y IS enh tled to
of the afore me ntioned per
counse l 1n the proceed1ngs
sons
Name of Decede nt Cdse a nd the Court will appomg
Num be r a nd Res 1de nce are counse l 1f the party 1s 1n
l1sted
d 1gent
Sai d Ca rl R Hyse ll Will
Clara J Powe ll (Case
make due return of th1s
No 2335;) R D 1 RaCi ne
Oh10 and Guy H Ne&gt;qler wnt on or before the IBth
!Case No 2337;) Ra c me day of May , 1981
Oh10
W tness my hand and tt1e
You a re he r eby not lf1 ed seal of sa1d Court th1s 13th
that the lnve nton es a nd day of Aprli , 1981
ROBER T E BUCK
App ra rse me nt s ol the
estate of the aforemen
J UDGE
By J anet E M0rr1 s
t1oned deceased la te of
Ch &gt;ef Dep uty Clerk
sa 1d County , were f1l ed m
thts Court Sa1 d Inventor es
and Appra 1se ments wil l be 14116 ltc
fo r hean ng before th1 s
Court on the 4th day of
PUbliC N0t1ce
May 1981 a t 1 30 o c loc k
PM
FINANCIAL
Any perso n des1rmg to
REPORT OF
Id e e)(cept1 ons the re to
TOWNSHIPS
must f1l e the m at le ast ftv e
For Ftscal Year
da ys prtor to the date set
End1ng December
for hea nng
31 , 1980
G1 ven unde r my hand
sutton Townshl~
a nd sea l of sa 1d Court fh1 s
Meo~s County
13th day of A pr~/198 1
Rac1ne, Oh1o
Rober1 E Buck
March 20, 1981
Judge
I cerftfy the fOllOWing
report to be correct
By Ca rolyn T Thomas
Pauls Moore
Deputy Clerk
Township Clerk
14) 16, 23, 4tc
Tel No
614 949 21"
Public No1tce
SUMMARY OF
FUND BALANCES,
PROBATE COURT
RECEIPTS AND
OF MEIGS
EXPENDITURES
COUNTY, OHIO
Balance
NOTICE OF
Jan 1, 1910
APPOINTMENT
General Fund
S 3,954 40
OF FIDUCIARY
Motor Veh•cle
The follOwing persons
L1cense Tax
were, on the dates shown
Fund
458 49
appointed to admmlster the Gasol1ne- Tax
following
decedents
Fund
589 75
estates pend1ng m the Road and Bridge
Meigs County Probate
Fund
56 60
Court
Cemetery Fund
4 579 77
Fiduciary's Name. Ad
Federal Revenue
dress and T1t1e, Date of Ap
6 872 79
Sharing Fund
po1ntmenift
Decedents Total
16,511 80
Name an Address, and
Total Receo~ts
Case Number ••~listed
Gener•l Fund
13,458 68
Hilton Wolfe.~, Sr , Box Motor VehiCle
114 Racine uh lo 45771
L1cense Ta x
Marc h 27 , 1981 . Ad
Fund
8.55606
PUBLIC NOTICE
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT
JUVENILE
DIVISION,
MEIGS COUNTY
OHIO
SUMMONS
CASE NO 23182

I

---- Public Nottce

---

Gasol1ne r a x
16.800 00
Fund
Road and Br1dge
3 459 75
Fund
4 074 80
Cemetery Fund
Federal Revenue
Shar 1ng Fund 10.211 00
56,570 29
Total
Total Receipts
and BataniieS
Ge nera l Fund
17,,13 08
Motor Veh1cle
L ce nse Tax
9 014 55
F und
Gasolme Tax
17 389 75
F und
Road and Bndge
3.516 35
Fu nd
8 65457
Ce mete ry Fund
Federal Revenue
Sharmg Fund 17,093 79
73.082 09
Total
E)lpendtfures
Ge neral Fund
13,016 41
Motor Veh1cle
L1cense Tax
7 417 18
F und
Gasoline Tax
Fund
15,905 50
Road and Bndge
3, 425 15
Fund
Cemetery Fund
3 679 89
Federal Revenue
Shanng Fund
6 128 65
49,572 78
Total
Balance
Dec 31 1980
Genera l Fund
4 396 67
Motor Veh1 c le
L1 cense Tax
Fund
1 S97 37
Gasol ne Tax
I 484 25
Fund
Road and Bndge
Fund
91 20
Ce mete ry Fund
4 97 4 68
Federa l Revenue
Shanng Fund 10,965 1•
Total
23 509 31
CASH BALA~NCE ,
RECEIPTS ND
ElCPENDIT RES
BY FUN
General Fund
Balance Jan 1.
1980
3 954 40
Recetpts
Ge nera l Property
Tax- Rea Estate
a nd Trader
I Grossi
6,891 19
T3ng 1ble Persona l
P roperty Ta x
(Gross)
114 16
Estate Ta x
I Grossi
598 20
Loca l Gove rnment and
State Income
Tax
2,800 93
tntang1ble
Tax
3 044 20
Total Rece pts
13,458 68
Total Beg1nnmg
Balance Plus
Rece1pts
17,413 08
Expenditures
Total Exp Adm 1n
12,216 41
Ftre
ProtectiOn
800 00
Grand Tota l Exp Gene ra l Fund 13,016 41
Balance, Dec 31
4,396 67
1980
Total E xp Plus
Bal , Dec 31 ,
1980
17,413 08
Motor Veh1cle
LICense Tax Fund
Ba lance Jan 1,
1980
458 49
Recetpts
Motor Vehicle License
Tax
8,556 06
Total Rece1pts
8,556 06
Total Beg&gt;nnlng
Balance Plus
Recetpts
9,014 55
E•pendttures
Total Exp MlSC
5,884 46
Ma 1nt
1,532 72
Grand Total Exp Motor Vehic le
LICense Ta x
Fund
7 .~17 18
Ba lance. Dec 31
1980
1,597 37
Total Exp Plus
Bal Oec 31
1980
9,014 S5
Gasohne Tax
Fund
Ba lance Jan 1.
1980
589 75
Receipts
Gasoline Tax
16,800 00
Total Rece.pts
16,800 00
Total Beglnnmg
Balance Plus
Receopts
17,389 75
E xpendltures
Total Exp
MISC
9,504 72
Ma1nt
6,400 78
Grand Total Exp Gasol ine Tax
Fund
15,905 50
Balance, Dec 31,
1980
1,484 25
Tota l Exp Plus
Bal , Dec 31,
1980
17,389 75
Road and Bridge
Fund
Balance, Jan I,
1980
5660
Rece&gt;pfs
General Property
Tax- Re•f Estate
and Tra&gt;ler
(Gross)
3,386 63
Tang&gt;ble Personal
Property Tax
!Gross)
72 41
Refund
70
Total Rece1pts
3,459 1S
Total Beglnn&gt;ng
Bal•nce Plus
Recetpts
3,516 35

--~~b_!t~Nottce

Dennis Bauer. Marsha is the

Rev. Walker and other men of First Baptist Church prepared and served breakfut to the ladles Saturday,
April 4 at 9 am. Forty-five were m
attendance
Fourteen ladles of Racme Church
attended the annual Tea of the B H
Sanborn Missionary Society April 6
at NO p m at the Middleport BaptiSt t:hurch.
Mr and Mrs. Robert Hart, Price
and Beth; Mr and Mn. Alan Cunrungham, Olivia and Zachary; Mrs.
Joyce Manuel, Donita and Robm,
went to Columbus to attend the weddill~( of Marsha Willis and James

-~

daughterofMr andMn Jack Willis c o
(Patsy Hart). They spent
weekend With Mr. and Mrs. Bruce- • '
Hart and Mr Wyatt Smith
•
Mn Nancy Bobb and grandson '.'
Benjamin of Colwnbus, Mrs. Joann
Parsons and daughter Julie ofc .:
Toled~, Russell Radcliffe Of "

tbe:::

Syracuse, Frances FOB!er, local, . ~
spent Tuesday, March 25, With Mrs. ~
Hazel Carnahan
"
Mr and Mrs. Willlsm Long have
moved into their home, Rt. 3, ' '
Racme The1r granddaughter, "
Patricia Pauley of Portland, visited
over the weekend

__:;_

·•·r·"' '·'_.
·• ·· ""'·"'. .
-·•• .......
...............

NOTICE OF SALE
In pursuance Of an order
of the Probate Court of
Me&gt;gs
County,
Oh1o,
Homer
Baxter ,
Ad
m1n1strator of the Estate of
Dillon Harold Taylor,
Deceased, will offer tor
sale on the 24th day of
Apr&gt; I, 1981, at 19 00 am on
the Me1gs County Cour
thouse steps
Pomeroy.
Oh10 1 24 acres located 1n
Lebanon Township, Me1gs
County
Oh10, e&lt;eept
m1nerals, as shown tn deed
recorded '" Vol 223, Page
529 of the Me~gs County
Deed Records, belongmg to
the late D1llon Harold
Taylor Terms of the sale
are cash
The Ad
mmlstrator reserves the
r&gt;ght to refuse any and all
bldS
Homer Baxter,
Adm&gt;niSirotors of the
Estate of
D&gt;llon Harold ~aylor, Dec
(41 9, 16, 23, 3tc

LAFF-

1 wJSh to thank all my
fnends tor the1r prayers.
cards and g1tts wh1le 1 was
m Lew1s Gale Hosp1tal
Roanoke Va for 10 days
How1e Dorst
--~========

RACINE GUN • SHOOT ,
Rac.ne Gun Club, every
Fnday n1ght start1ng at
7 30 p m Factory c hoke
guns only

---- - - - --

Rac1ne Volunteer F1re
Department sponsors a
shot gun &amp; r&gt;fle match
every Sat n1ght 6 30 p m
at thetr bu1ldmg 1n Bashan
Factory choke 12 guage
shot guns only Open Sights
22 r~tle
ITS BEELINES Show and
Tell Ttmetllll OUr new
spnng and summer l1ne 1S
now ava1lable and IS 1t un
bellevable 1111 G1ve us a
call for more lnformat1on
about thts 1nterest~g work
Phone 992 3941 from 9 6
LOCKSMITH
ServiCe ,
Master Key,ng, Com
bmat1ons Bonded Call
New Haven, W Va 304 882
2079
RACINE Gun Club has
d1scontmued gun shoots un
Ill September

PHONE 992-2156

STOBARTS Greenhouse Is
now opened II ts located on
Rac ine Rt 2 C R 100
Hangmg baskets &amp; bedd&gt;ng
plants Vegel•bles &amp; plants
of all k1nds

or Wr1te Da11y Senttnel Classtfled Dept
111 Court 51 , Pomeroy&gt;, 0., ~5769

CLASSIFIED AD INDE~
•ANNOUNCEMENTS

•RENTALS

1 - Co~rdol T!li nkS

41-HCKIIUIOt Rtlll
42- Moltl lt Hom., 1

tor Rent

l - Announctm!l\tl
4- GIYtiWIW"
~ - l'lipp y Ad'

44- APirlmtnlluri Rent
U- FRGOf'll

6- Lolhnd 'ound
' - Yudhl!!
1- Pybhc Sill!
I Auct1on

4._Sp.ctlor "'"'

41- Wtnftd to I: tnt

eMERCHANDISE

•EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

s' - HCKistheiG oJct,

S2- CI

,, _ Htlp w1 nttd

TV

I:ICIIoiEquiiM"tflf

U - AniiQUII

11- !IIIUA!td Want~

~.- MIIC Merche~d l tl

ll- ln5urlnce
14- llumen Tra•n•ng

5J-Iwlldlnt h''''"
..-Pttllor hit

15- Sc~ooll

lnstruct•on

11- Wtnttd To Do

Gray &amp; whlte male k1tten,
w1ll neuter &amp; furn1sh shots
Must be assured of gOOd
home m 535~

U-Wift,MfCIIuY,

71- Trucllt ttr 111~

~untn

U - ll'f'..IOCII
64- Hiy &amp; Grtln
u - ieed &amp; ,.,tmaer

OpportUnity

Ia LOin

ll- ProltUtORII
StrVIUI

6

eTRANSPOtlTATION

·''

'

JI - Homu lor Saltl
12- Mobtle Homes
lor Ult
33- Pitrmllor S.lt

7•- Mot•rcycltl

71-

~uto

'•rtt

&amp; Accenorte•

71- Auto ~e,-lr

)1- IUIIRIIIIUIIdlnts

n - L.oh I Acrtlte
J6- Rifl ESitft W.lntiCI

LOST
MALE
SCHNAUZER, answers to
the name of Shultz, dark
gret• last Sund•y morning
at t&lt;OCk Springs In Meigs
High scnoot area Reward
Please call Dick Owen,
26S1 or 992 5627

eSERVlCES

H- litullort

11 - HomtlmllfCiv'!'"tntl

12- Piumlflnt I
U- I,CIVIIII'II
.. -IIKirlcel
a ltelrlttrt!IM

want Ad Advertleong
Dead tones
2 30 P M DillY

m

U-OMM'II HIYII'1f
H-M H ltt,.lr

12 NOOI'I 51 turd_,
tor Monday

'

I~CI'f'lllnt

11- UIIhollltry

LOST
Small •prlcot
poodle In Rutland •re• 7~2
2354 or m 3712

Rates and Other Inform•tlcm
1J Worelt or Unlltr

t

u.-

111
1tl

.....

2 dirt
]

LOST
In Long Bottom
area 1 collie dog Name
Shane Reward 992 2.W

CUr II

Ill
Ill

6 diW'I

7

bell worel ovtr lilt minimum IS wtr.lll • Clfttl Nr ,..,. " ' •v
••• ruMinl othtr lh11n connclltiYt ..,, will IMcftlr. . lf tfttiHJ
In memory C4_ri of

Ifill\ 1M 0""'"'" 1 cfflfl

m l n•mum (elh rn edvenct

.e. ..,., 11 •

ca.

MOC.1I1 Home IIIII lr'lll Y~rd Ulel lfiiCUit,_ on l~ "lttl cnflwltft
orcttr 2J Cffll CIWr.. rer 1ft Hrrylnt lo• NufftN• '" Ct,.l tf TM
Sonllntl

goodies

l.l.-- - - - - - . . . . . . , . , , - : - - -

Yard Sale

4 family yard sate 16, 17 &amp;
n
101 Fisher St,
Pomeroy Avon, clothes Of
all sizes &amp; girls dresses
sizes 10 14,
walchel,
guitar, moforcycle &amp; ~Mr

ratt

-+- ---'1 - - - - - - -

Yard Sate Thursday and
Friday Aprol 16 and 17 at
119 Butternut Avenue
Clothes and m 1sc
Yard Sale across from
Cltnes Fru1t Farm on old
Rt 7, Thursday, Fr&gt;day,
Saturday
Furn1ture ,
c loth1ng, drapes ant1ques.
toys, gun trap and gun
c ase Phone 667 3334
Yard Sale Thursday and
Fr•day from 9 5 on 927
Brownell Avenue . Mtd
dleport
819 garage sale 10 Dan
ville, Thursday , Fnday,
and Saturday All k1nds of
1te ms Phone 741 3017

Yard Sale

3 fam1ly yard sale on C R
31 near Bald Knob
Cemetery Clothes fur "
n1ture&amp; m1sc Wed Th1,.1rs
&amp; Fr&gt; 843 2933
9

Wanted to Buy

,,

WANTED
TO BUY ~
GOLD
SILVER , ·
PLATINUM STERLING
COINS RINGS,JEWELR
Y, MISC ITEMS AB "
SOLU T E
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTEO ED
BURKETT
BARBER '
SHOP
Ml DDLEPORT
0Hl0992 3476
DLD COINS, pocket wat '
ches, class r1ngs, weddmg
bands diamonds Gold or
S11ver Call J A Wamsley,
Treasure Chest Com Shop . ,
Athens, OH S944221

wanted to Buy class nngs,
wedding bands, anyth ing
stamped,
10K 14K, or 18K '
F1ve
family
carport
sale Ram or sh1ne , 324 gold Si lver co&gt;ns pocket '
Beech Street, Middleport watches Call Joe Clark at
Aprll 16 17 , and 18th 9 5 992 2054 at Clark 's Jewelry '
Furnoture, clothes, and lots Store, Pomeroy Ohoo 45769
of m1sc 1tems Phone 992
CHIP WOOD Poles rna~ ,
7339
d1ameter 14 ' on largest
FRI &amp; Sal , 531 5 2nd end $12 50 per ton Bundled '
Ave , M1ddleport 10 4 s lab $10 50 per ton
Chlfdren &amp; c lothtng, some Oel 1vered to Oh10 Pallet l
Co , Rock Springs Rq ,
toys, other m1sc 1tems
Pomeroy 992 2689

YARD SA LE
Behmd
grade school Fro &amp; Sat at IRON AND BRASS BEDS
whlte tra&gt;l e r Dresses bed Old furniture, desks, got(!,,
spreads, Avon bottles r1ngs , 1ewelry, Stiver
dollars sterllng , etc Wood
miSe Call 742 2823
tee boxes tars, anhques '
etc complete households
YARD SALE Aprol17 &amp;.18 Wnte M 0 Miller, Rt 4,
on State Route 554 between Pomeroy , OH 45769 Or
c a/1992 7760
Chesh~re and Porter
Public Sale
&amp; Auclion

8

PUBLIC AUCTION

WANTED People to
Avon Work your
hours Part ttme or
t~rY! If 1nterested call
1354or 742 27SS

ex

l::========~:;::=========~

sell
own
full
742

18

Woman to stay w1th e lderly
woman that has arthr~t1 s
Bo~rd and some pay 991
7126

100 acre farm
Chester
Towns h1p on R1 l48 Smal l
house &amp; barn 667 6119 or
Y8&gt; '146

W111 do att types of c]r
Mob1le Homes
penter work Expen enc d J2
for Sale
and responsibl e No tOb to
b1g or to small Phone 9 2 1973 Crown Haven 14 x 65
3941 anyt1me
three bed1ooms new car
pet 1971 Cameron 14 x 64,
AUERAT IONS &amp; gen~al two bedrooms new ca rpet
sewrng expe r1enced wo k 1971 Champ1on, 12 x 60 two
gua ranteed M Me 1er
2 bedrooms new carpet 1976
5983
Cameron, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, all electn c 1971
12sx 61
two
1nrenor and exrer•or pa1n Skytme
1
11 ng wanted No tOb to bedrooms bath &amp; J new
c arpet
1970 PMC
sm a ll 949 2379
12 x 60 two bedrooms. new
carpe r B ~ S Sa tes. Inc
lnd • V1and Street Pomt
Pleasant WV Phone 675
4414
Mobile home
bedroom 992 7479
21

three

Business
Opportuntty

lO x4B trader w1th 2 added
HOMES
fa ct ory rooms 12 x42 on 101 1n
d~r ~ct
dealer s h•P Syra cuse $11 ,000 991 5065
a vail ab le
1nve stme nt or 991 5886
re qu ,red unlim 1ted 10come
potent 1a 1 Ca ll Mr Stacey 14 x 60 twa bedroom Holly
1 80Q 438 9528
Park mobile home w1th
central a1r Phone 992 2598
LOG

St1ua11ons Wanted

WCJMAN Seek1ng e m
ptovment HOSPITal , Dr of
f1 ce of C tm1 c as recep
fl ORISt or Med1 cal records
Any sh•rt or days Know
med 1cal
te rmin Ology
Refere nces 74l 1030

Rea I Estate

1

In need ol work Ex
per1en c ed
sk1dd er
oPera1 o r
bulldoz e r
operator and truck dnver
Ca/1992 5776 or 992 3288
Wnl Care fOr elder ly 1n OUr
home Man wo man or
coUple Tra. ned and e&gt;c
pepenced 991 7314

'
Have room and board and
laundry fro elder ly 1n my
home $.250 00 per month
'l'li 6022
ll

Homes for Sale

]1

wanled to Do

Furna ce reparrs electn~al
work plumb1ng mob le
home or res1dence 9 2
5858

WANTED housekeeper to
help w•th elde rly woman
crtppled by arthr1t1s
Room
board &amp; some
wages 992 7216

12

1nsurance

IN
AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE bee n can
your
celled"&gt;
Lost
operator s 11 ce nse? Phone
992 1143

Jl

Trailer tor sale 3 bedroom
w1t h one and one half
baths fully furn1shed un
derp1nn 1ng storm Windows
and doors Reasonable If
mterested ca/1992 5433

Homes for Sate

Br~ c k house on wooded 1~
Three bed rooms large k t

chen tam1\y room daub
garage deck M1d Suct1
991 5;20

e

3~

S1x room house on Roseh1!1
Beaut1ful 1 12 a cre settmg
Basemen t and ga rage Low
t1 f11es 6" 678 1513
Two or three bedroon,
home on acre 1n Pom eroy
Large deck gardener s
dream 28.000 Also, 2 and
one half acres that would
be a beau t1ful building Site
sec luded yet '" town
$7 500 Call 992 6279 or 992
5310

Knit In Cotton!

'• .Wnte

SATURDAY, APRIL 18

~
~

your own ad and order by mall w1th th1s
coupon Cancel your ad by phone ~ en you get
J results Money not refundable

AT 9:00 O'CLOCK A.M.
Take St Rt. 60 lo McConnelsvolle, Oh10 -turn east
on St . Rt 78 lowards Caldwell for S moles to Meigs
(Mu«onburgl atlhe Mary &amp; Wayne Fox ReSidence.
SELLING LARGE COLLECTION ANTIQUE FUR •'
NITURE, O~D ITEMS, GLASS, CHINA, GUNS,
ETC ANTIQUE FURNITURE INCLUDES 4 oak
bOOkcase secretanes, oak hall tree seat, Vtctorlan ' •
stands, cherry, oak&amp;. walnut chest/drawers, slant
front desks , flatwall cupboards, several
washstands, many dressers. Empire chests, round ' '
oak tables. other tables w/ 4 5 6 &amp; 8 legs, dropleaf
tables, harvest table 2 pte safes children's st &amp;
h1gh chairs, walnut baby cradle, h&gt;ghback beds
organ stools, Lincoln &amp; other rockers, butter
chests, Sideboards &amp; buffets, blanket chest, set 6
Queen Anne dining chairs wtcane backs, app 50 st
chairs In s~ngle, pairs &amp; sets, wicker furniture, all '
k&gt;ndS stands &amp; sm,. tables clock &amp; what not
•
shelves hall trees; Solvertone victrola, lelly cup '
boards and m•ny extr• good pieces antique fur
nlture
GLASS &amp; CHINA Includes He1sey, Cambridge,
carn1va1, ruby, pink, blue, green, amethvst, press
ed, etc · Compotes, cake stand, butter &amp; honey
d&gt;shes, salters, Shirley Temple pitcher, cruets,
vases, glass baskets, glass eggs, hand patnted
dishes. partial set Crooksville china. few pes
Weller &amp; Roseville pottery; sponge ware, and many
~
other good pieces
OLD ITEMS INCLUDE 1 2 wall telep~ones, ~
telephone parts cOffee grtnders, Lance pe•nut Jar,
,.
copper &amp; .ron kettles, Aladdin, oil lamps, stone •
Jars, Jugs a. crocks, sterescopes, tot tin a. granite •·
ware. Donaghue Jars, copper &amp; Iron tea kettles,
~
stone &amp; glass churns, 4 sets sleigh bells, collection •
small bells, dinner bell, ox (eke, lot extra nice pic
l
lures, frames &amp; mirrors, collection lanterns. car
••
bide lights, flat Irons, foot adz, broad axes, com cut
'1
ters, augers, picks, Ice tongs, wagon seat, wooden
,
pulleys, apple peelers, stirrers, rug bealers, scales, •'
and many Other primitives Lot wooden bowls &amp; :.
tamws. Jot woven baskets. glass Dazey churn, tin '
&amp; Iron toys, Fairbanks scales out Of old counlry ,.
slore, glass canes, tomahawk, quitting frames.
buggy tongues, sugar bucket, and m•ny other misc.
old Items
GUNS &amp; CABINETS· the tude 2 gun cabinets (1 fan
'•
cyl. 10 shotguns, 3 rifles; one 38 special; We•ver i,

'

K~K~

These extra good antiqu•s have bean collected from
slores &amp; homastNdJ throughout sevtral counties.
Many havt peen handed down lor . .narations 'I' hie
wlll be an all day antique auction - no mOdern
ttemstebasold.
Notlllnl shown before day Ill sale. Lunchon
Jll'tfllilft Sale held outside 10 clraee tor the
wut!Mr. Bring your cllair. Motels &amp; Hotels In
Marltna &amp; zanesvlltt. It on ttmt- lilt mull start
at' O'clock A.M. Sat., April 11.
Mary '••In Cllarta ol Salt.
OWNIRS- MARY I WAYNE .. OX
Aucti-n- lUI
RaiNiy Nawstma

~

•I

:Name-----------I
\Address, _
_ _ _ _ _ _ __

I

l~hon•-----------------

1;
I •Print one word 1n eacn
1 : space below Each '"
l ' illal or group of f1gures
1: counts as a word Count
~ name and address or
I •phone number 1f used
11 You' 11 get better results

in, A6a 13,..,~
These cash rates
1nclude dtscount

I

Wanted
For Sale
Announcerylent
For Rent

t; r
I• I

I: I

18
109
I.
2 - - . . . . . . , . - - - I·
21
I

I:
I"
Ii

22
I
23•· ~----- I

I)

I
I•

11::

2
341. _
-___
_
_-

I:
~

7 _..:;.__ _ _ __

a _______

-_
-.;.__
-1, :·., 109 ____

•t1 ~ 11.12 - - - - - ' - - 1;·

24

I

-----15
-.-----26
· ----~-

I'&lt; s6 -_
-_
-_
-_1
__'_
I

J•-·
1111- tiHIJ-3411

30
31 . _ _ _ _ _ _

''

t~:..

I

1

32
I
33
I
34.- - - - - - 1
35
I

,.
t:
t:

I

The cotton sweateo IS lhe
newest tash1on now
Kml l nee~ sweateo w1th ra1s
ed "'riiCal st11pes ol 3 stoands of
bedspread conan then crochet
prelt) shell sl1tch ed&amp;"l on
nee~ ~rmholes Panern 7140
S11es 10 11 14 16 inCI
$2.00 tor each J)lllern Add
501 each 111nern lor poslqe
and handiln&amp; Stod lo

...

ltMiemf!Dift.

GARAGE

I
lI

Mall This Coupon with Remittan,ce
The DillY 5111hnel

Bo•m

~~

Housing
Head uarters

Vmyl &amp; Alum mum
SIDING

BISSEll
SIDING CO.

- Addons and
remOdellng
-Aoottng and gutter
work
-Concrete work
- Piumbong and
electrtcal work
(Free Estimates)

- Auto and Truck
Repatr
-TransmiSSIOn
Repa1r
Hrs Mon Fn
9 AM l lOp M

''BeautlfUI Custom
8u111 Garages
Call for free s1d1ng
estimates, 949 2801 or
949 2860
No Sunday Calls~
3 11 lfc

V.C. YOUNG II

992 56 8 2

99l 621S or992 7lU

10 7 ttc

Pomeroy, Oh

- ----- ~

~

-

Ylll. IT 10113. Plilt "-.

*-.

Zip, Patllnl • • •
Catch on to tile Clift boom' Send
for ou1 NEW 1981 NEEOI.ECRAFl
CA !~lOG Oter 171
3
1ree
AU

I
I
I

l-~-~~~~=!~~~~~~----~--J

SERVICE

All Models.

Available
LEO MORRIS
Rt I S•de H1ll Rd
Rutland Oh
9

BAILEY'S SHOES

1&lt; u p Thts Ad

Call Ken Young
For F.s l Serv u
985· 3561

Sties
"From JOx 30"
SMALL

PAR TS AND SE RV CE

Utility Buildings

A LL MAKE S
ew ;asner i
•D 5P05ah
•Dr yen
eO ,t1woullers

S&gt;zes from 4&gt;6 to 12&gt;&lt;40

•R•ng e~

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

5 ptm • l Na les fo r
~ C on

... A pt

~

PH 949 2777
• Complete Auto and
Truck Repa~r
*Rebut It Automatic
TransmiSSIOns
on
most Amertcan Model
Cars
• 522S 00 Parts &amp; Labor
Plus Flutd
• 24 Hour Wrecker
Serv1ce
* Trtple A Afflllatect
4 61 mo

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

ROOFING
"SpecJahzmg In
Re· Roofmg"
1 Small Carpenter Jobs
Darrell Brewer
PH 992 2882
9'12 2606

•
•
e
•

Backhoe
E•cavartng
Septtc System s
water, Sewer &amp; Gas
L1nes
• Dump Truck
L1censed &amp; Bonded

992 7861
3 11 1 mo pd

PH. 992-7201
4 151 mo

~=========j::=::::::;;====:::;~t;:========:::::;-

Baby rabb 1ts for sa le fo r'
Easter S4 00 each Com e
up st Rl 124 toward
Rac 1ne and make a left
hand turn to Bowman Run
Road come out one mtle
and turn nght to the tre1ler
on the r.ght to M1ke Brown
res1dence
Just tn lime for Easter
AKC reg1stered black
Labrador pups Wormed
and
Shots $100 00 7285 evenmgs

992

:
I

"'

1
1
I
1
1

Four 15,000 gallon tanks
located above ground at
Athens, Oh&gt;o $3,000 00
each Phone 1 304 422 2781

4~2~78~ -

----

---_ ~1---Gra.!."
__ _

-~--

Hay for Sate 7S a bale 843
2'133ur 843 4831

I=
'

...............
.. . .. . . . .....
'.

--- Mobile Home

2 bedroom
Adults only
Browns
Trailer Court. Minersville
9'12 3324
I
Two t;allers for rent, [fit~
n1shed, 11r cond1tlot)tng,
cable tv 773 5651

~r~ hOu~ln

Three
Pomeroy 1175 oo 1
th.
1100 oo deposil You pay
utilllles Phone 992
References required
- Apartm. .l ~­
torRent

.. ------~

71

'

Autos for Sale

t

2 23 1 mo :

'---------------

1

PEST CONTROL
Roaches
B 1rds ,
Rodents. Sp1ders Fleas,
Ants and other s mall1n
sect control
FREE ESTIMATES
1 or 5 vear term1te
guarantee
Located 1n Galhpohs
Ph 614 446 2801
3 27 1 mo

lt76 Ford Elite, Willie Wilh

75

Boats and
Motors for Sale

17 It GlaSiron fiberglass
cru&gt;ser W&gt;th 100 h p out
board Mercury moto r
F&gt;berglass top w1lh full
canvas all life preservers,
ski equ1pment &amp; tandem
axle tra&gt;ler 51 ,.95 367
7811

Gu•ges
B•rns

Porte b!e Sl tt l
Slor•g• Bulldmg '

Equipment (4 116 I Ml 1 -1 0
sned s
10 11 10 10 Mll a up I
An.-

I U l!

bUill

you r

ICl

MOCtll
In
Me191 G1llioll &amp; M.son Coun

Sptc111U110n l

ties
FREE ESTIMATES- AL L
!UILDINGS GUARAN TEED

PHONE 367-7671

or 367-7560

1m rovetnents

F rench C1ty Pa 1ntmg
ReStdentlal, commerc1al
1nter1or
exter1or
Spectai1Z1ng In tntenor
pa&gt;nllng, paper hang,ng &amp;
textured cei lings
Free
est&gt; mates 367 7784 or 3J&gt;7
7160

12

Ptumbtng

_ _ _ &amp; ~e•ting

WATER
WELLS
Oomesttc and commereta l.
pump sales and servJCe
Tom
Lewis
Drtlltng
Se•sonal discount on pum
ps 1 304 895 3802 or 1 304
195 3641

&amp; Refrigeration

SEWING

MAC~lNE

Repa~rs

serv1 ce
all
makes1 992 2284 1 The
Fabr&gt;c Shop
Pomeroy
Authonzed S1nger Sales
and Servi ce We sharpen
SC ISSOrS

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR Sweepers
toasters, irons, al l small
appl1~nces Lawn mower
Next to State Htghway
Garaoe on Route 7, 98S
3825
Avadable to handle all your
electr1cal needs Repatrs,
w1r.no. re W1r1ng , '"
stallafiOn, modifications,
revls1ons,
res1dent1al.
farm, business No tob to
l•rge or to small Available
•mmedlatety Bill Cadle at
992 7182

-- _

2211

General Haunnw
Dllcher work Gas Water II
Electric Installed 742 2819
Well's Trash Heullng lS 00
bltfore9 :00p m
per monlll Ollvt and
Oranllt Townsntps and
DOZER wort&lt; Small
surrounding arm 985
specialty 742 2753
3511 \

m

•tD

REESE BUILDINGS

ll
E •cavatln~•L-­
COMPLETE sever 1n
stallatlon &amp; backhoe ser
vice tor Racine Syracuse
sewtr district Dozer work
If needed 949 2293

_.. - - - - -·
Home
radio, cruise control, new 11
lmprovam. .ts
radial
tim,
low
mlluge
4 rooms &amp; bllll apart.b.nt
Gooa conclllion
3015
1n Pomeroy 992 5621
Gene s Carpet Cltantng,
deeP slream extraction
Fru
estimated,
v-14W .D.
reasonable rates, scot·
-~
"" .u truc:k n,ooo 915 chquard 992 6309 or 742·

n

l'l.nyl &amp;
Alumtnum Stding
• tnsulahon
• Storm Doors
• Storm Wtndows
• Replacement
Wtndows
Free Est1mate
James Keesee
Ph. 992 2772
3 23 1 mo

Qual tl y Bu tII

Econom,c•II Y P riced

r---------t::::==~====i--=-=====-:­
.-,- - -H'Oifte
14
Electrical

-~

r ..

Free E stlmates
Pnc es
Calf Howard
"' 2862
949 2160
2 4 tt c

~ e a s onable

• 12 !I t

1971 Chrysler, all electric 12 foot alum1num boat, 5
wllh new tires
Runs h p motor and tratler
good 1350 00 742 2139
Motor has very few hours
9\12 3791
1969 Pontiac F lreblrd
OHC6, 000C1 ttres, IIOOd
body, can be seen at 628 E
Cam pong
Matn St next to Cement II
Equopmenl
Block 1600
1979 Coachman Motor
1979 Corvette, mint con home, 22 ft loke new Call
dillon, low mileage with all 742 2770 Low mlleage,
options
Reuonably man\1 extras
priced After 5 call 378 6117
or371 6293
brown tnterlor, 1 c, am fm

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

TERMITE and

Two bedroom furnl
304112 2566

Sf1mson Ave Athens,
Hours
Man Tues fJ 6
Weds Fr• 9 7
Sal
Closed

A11 types of root wort.:
new or repa1r gul1e rs
and downspout s, gutter
cl e an1ng and pamrmg
All work guar anteed

I~=========llr=========t;::::=======:::::;-

ILHttSIIEfl

61
F:.•t!!'..Equipment
Used R 40 D&gt;fch W1fc h
Trencher 1 614 694 7842

CYQ.ES

Cant help you
TIRES GOING BALD'
I Wt nave Frrutorte 72 1§ 3fld wt
I can help
1 Ph 992·2094

ROOFING
ATHENS SPORT

I
I

: POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

H. L WHITESEL

1

COINGBALD'P

__ , ........ ......
-·····-··
..... . . . .

tor Renl

-

Mou~ e owners

w
n-~~

"' Mobtlt! Home P Hks

Water Sewer E tectnc
Gas Lme Ditche S
Water Lme Hook ups
septiC Tanks
county Certd1ed
Roush Lane
Cheshire. Oh
Ph 367 7l60
1 7 tfc

Pomeroy

L•undn es

,. Renti!l l Proper11e$

REESE~

9f2 2181

•H oiW•IerTa nk s

Repatrtng Smce Hl

Rt 3, Box 54
Rac&gt;ne Oh
Ph 6U 8'l259l
6 15 tfc

C&amp;AAUTO REPAIR
320 Sttl St Aat1ne 011

1 walker male 5 years old
(n1te champ1on, I walke r
female 4 years old
1 I --------------- 1
walker male pup All are :
1
UKC fegiSiered 949 2657 l
~
~
I
Mon Sat after 5 p m
'-'
I
1
~
1

'Moiitii Homei r -

apartment 992 543A

lor Fulure Reterence

APPLIANCE SERVICE

Farm Buildings

-- --Pels for Sale

~

44

Osborn Rd
Reedsville. Oh
3 16 I mo

ALL STEEL

CONSTRUCTION
New Homes
ex·
tens1ve remodelmg
• Eleclncal work
• Roofmg work
12Years
Exper.ence
Greg Roush
Ph 992·7583
3 2• 1 mo

ANN'S CAKE
DECORATING
SUPPLIES

Effecltve 4·6·81
MON.thru SAT.
9 to 5
Closed Thursd~y
491mopd

~LANDMARK

304

42

ALL CAKE
DECORATING
SUPPLIES

NEW STORE HR

4 14.000 gallon tanks
located above ground at
Athens, Oh $3,000 each 1

Reitals

20%-30% OFF

TRENCHING
SERVICE

16

ROUSH

SALE

322 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Oh10

saaoo

E Mam Sf

2 3195
Call 74 .
or 992 7680

r-~=:.....--=====:::::j=======2::":':..~=======1:: 8: :t :c:=

PUSH
MOWER

OMIIW M

For all of your wtr·
mg needs
Let George M1ller check
your present electncal
system
Res1dent1al
&amp; CommerCial

60"-45-80 H P

20 INCH

NEV. -'STING - L•«l
Jot and located on a ~
street ~~ S-;racuse 1ce
llving foom equ1p d
kitchen, 3 bedroo s,
and a large garage llf&gt;lh
work area $43 000 001
NEW LISTING - In
Middleport Th1S 2 Sf ry
frame had a 101 of w rk
done and ts real cut It
has 6 rooms, 3
d
rooms
woodburn nef
foreplace and a s all
storage bldg $18 ,500
AN ACRE IN TOW And a 12x65 Holly P rk
Mobile Home w1th n
tral ~ur cond some ~ur
n1ture
woodburn;er
and ISm excellent coj d'
hon $16,500 00
CLOSE TO TOWN
A
sma/13 room home 1fh
a large 32x30 gar ge
and 1112 acres Ho e
does need to be f1n1s d
$19,000 00
ONE FLOOR - Plu a
full basement ma es
fh&gt;S 9 room, 2 bath ho e
ntce If has 4 bedroo s
kitchen, d1010g IIVI g
fam&gt;ly and Tv r m
Also there IS a gar ge
and workshop 1n the
basement $45,000 00
WE HAVE OVER lO
PROPERTIES
TO
CHOOSE FROM. STOP
BY AND LET US SHOW
THEM TO YOU.
REALTOR
Henry E Cleland, J
1192 6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussal1949·2 o
Roger &amp; Dollie Turn r
11925691
OFFICE 9t2-22S9

MillER ELECTRIC

ARD

AT POMEROY
LANDMARK

RiaiEState :... General

'! I

The Dally Sentinel
ila IU, «*C.. $Ia., lw

~ · ---'----1 M

I"
·~ l6lSi .-_-_- -_-_' -___,-__-

ll' '
.~

1
1

27 ------~

1~

•
'

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I

17------1
.:...----:--1

-----, :: 13 - - - - - - -14,, - - - ' - " ' - - - - - -

,

7240

t I ll you describe fully ,
l ; g1ve pr1ce The sent1ne1
a eserves the nght to
I : classifY edtt or re1ect
I 1any ad Your ad will be
I •put 1n the proper
1: claS11tcaiiOn II you II
I ' Check the proper box
I ' below

Il
I• I

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

ROGER HYSELL'S

NEW LISTING
Pnvate sleeptng rooms,
MOdern 3 or 4 bedroom wtth cook1ng faCilitieS a~r
home, bath, natural gas cond1t1ontng and cable tv
F A furnace Natural
773 5651
wood cab.nets 10 k1t
• __ _
-- ~--'
chen. full basement
Space l~r _!lent
Sl&gt;dong glass door to 46
front porch and nice lot
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Only$37,500
Park, Route 33 North of
REAL BUY - 2 or 3
bedroom frame home
9'12
7479
Pomeroy
Large lots Calli
w•th bath, large k1tchen,
lots of varn1shed wood
TRAILER spaces for rent
cab1nets Natural gas
Southern Valley Mob1le
F A
furnace porch
Home Park Chesh1re. Oh
garage and level lot tor
' 992 3954
only $18,500
NEW LISTING
Beautiful nver front
CampSITes for ren t
1ocat1on 4 n1ce size
scentc nverbank Util1t1eS
bedrooms 2 full baths,
pa 1d Small tra1lers only
modern b1rch kitchen,
Phone 773 5651
dmmg, 2 pat1os and
glassed 1n porch Large
maples for summer
comfort'" CheShire
NEW LISTING - 4 or 5
s1 Household Goods
bedroom fam1ly bnck
-home l 1' :1 baths new
gas F A furnace and USED COUCH 510, 769 I
Brownell Ave Middleport
central a1r All large
rooms eKcept one S gas
Sl
An_t19_U~S
fireplaces
flowers,
shrubbery and gar~ge
ATTENTION
l iM
near shopptng
PORTANT
TO
YOU)
Wlll
7 ACRES - Mmerals
pay cash or cert1fled c heck
Wtth gas well for your
tor ant1ques and collec
own use Small one
t1bles or ent1re estates
bedroom home leadang
NoTh1ng too large Also.
creek water and hen
guns pocket watches a nd
house Want$11,500
co1n collections Cal l 614
NEW LISTING 3
767 3167&lt;&gt;r557 3411
BR' s 1'12 baths, gas
heat City uti11t1es 2 por
54
M1sc Merchan1se
ches &amp; level lot 10 M1d
dleporttor $16.500
Load Star electnc ho•s t 1
NICE HOME - 14 yrs
ton exc cond $275 367
old, all on one floor. oak
7811
floors, f~replace 1n fam1
ly room and one m the
Baby bed &amp;u mattress
full basement Garage
Exc cond S35 992 2775
and 3 lOIS Att CitY
uti11t1es, 2 bedrooms
near shopp1ng
4)( 8 utt111y traile r Inclose d
1 66 ACRES - Ideal for
$125 992 277 5
house or mob1le home
Dnlled well, sepllc
Used refngerafor $35 992
tank, ahd electric are
3017
there Ready to move on
and set up Only $6,500

39 a cres m Bedford Town
Sh&gt;P 985 4194

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

'

l;::-:::::::::r;:==~:;::;;~~~==J;:========~

45
Fu!n!sh~ RCIC)!!'!..
Steep1ng rooms by the
week
K1tchen. and
tet~v~ston lounge Carryout
store and restaurant wtth1n
500 teet 992 6370

8 a cres more or less tor
sale s 11 000 991 2192

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

1

evenings

Lots &amp; Acreage

'

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I
I

9491216
Days 992 SS.il5

Business Services

r~~~~======j~~~~=====;fr========~

If you have sold 1nsur a nc~
sweepers, fuller brush etc
We can guarantee $1000 per
month 1f you qualify Call
992 7440 between 2 p m and
6pm

LARGE ALL DAY ANTIQUE SALE

D. D. I

No

perience
ed PAP0
PL¥ C~rctrequ1r
e Sales
Bo&lt; 224 D RJChmond Hll l
NY 11418

It'"'

l.i

r

\

Phone
1-1614) 992 3325

-"'
S18~ 00 to $500 weekly do&gt;ng

I
I
I

PubltcSale
&amp; Auctoon

J.

/,

IRGIL B SR
216 E Second Street

wanted_

work

~1;,.,;1

T

GET VALUABLE trammg
as a young bus1ness person
and earn good money plus
some great g1fts as a Sen
11ne1 route carr1er Phone
us nght away and get on
the eltg1b11 1ty l1 st at 992
2156 or 992 2157
ma111ng

1 bedroom turn1shed apar•
ment 1n Middleport All
ut&gt;llflfS pa&gt;d 5200 month

Heildquarters

Now buyong gold and
s1I'Ver old pocket watches
cha1ns diamonds, silver
money and co1ns Marttn s
Gen~ral Store Middleport
992 6370

H~p

------

Housing

Wa 1tress wa nted Apply 1n
person
St e amboa t
Restaurant, Ra c1ne Ber
ween3 30 7 OOp m

.

Lost and Found

Lost Sm•ll fem•le beegle
In Forest Run area
Weanng green nylon
collar all 992 2067 or 992
3012 or Don Grueser
Reword

Jl - .hiOs ,., hit
7l- Yifu&amp;•W D

eREALESTATE

Giveaway

1 male German pollee pup
py 2'1• months old '1'12
5270

" _ ,.,m lltUIPfn!lnl

• FINANCIAL
~2 - Mo"tY

4

• FARM SU~PLIES
&amp; LIVEST..,CK

R1d10 TV
I t:l Rtpl lr

11-

BAKE SALE Apnl17 &amp; 18,
Thr&gt;ft Shoppe , Meigs Co
Humane Soc1ety, M1d
dleport

41- Eq'ilpment lo ~ Rtnl

9- W ~t ntedto Bu)'

16-

Trash ServiCe Retractoon
I cannot p1ck up trash m
Syrac use area due to a con
tract
that
Lawrence
Manley Jr has wtlh lhe
VIllage D A (Chuck) Me
Pherson

7

3 tam&gt;ly garage sale
Thurs 16, Fro 17 9 4 488 s
Fourth Sf , Middleport Oh

S &amp; S Ceram1 cs now open
Localed at Jack ROOd B
res1dence, Tuppers Pla•ns,
Oh1o rues &amp; Thurs hours
10 a m .2 p m 7 p m 10
pm

WANT·AO INFORMATION

1- ln Memor 1m

Announcemenls

1 PAY h1ghest pnc es
pass1ble for gold and silver
co1ns nngs, 1ewe1 ry, etc
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport

·DAY

Yard Sale

7

Card of Thanks

3

New, used, and antique fur
n1ture No 1tem to large or
to small Will buy one p1ece
or complete households
Martin's General Sto1e a t
991 6370

11

By Mrs. Franco Morrta

_____ _______

Public Nottce

Expendttures
Tota l Exp MISC
3,425 15
Grand Total Exp Road and Br&gt;dge
Fund
3'2515
Bal , Dec 31 ,
1980
9110
Total Exp Plus
Bal , Dec 31
1980
3 516 35
Cemetery Fund
Balance Jan 1,
1980
4 579 77
Rece1pts
General Property
Ta x- Real Estate
and Tra il er
(Gross i
3 792 03
Tangible Persona l
Property Tax
(Gross )
81 77
Saleot Lots
200 oo
Total Rece1pts
4 074 80
Total Begmnmg
Balance Plus
Rece&gt;pts
8 654 57
Expendttures
Sa lanes
3 050 55
Repa&gt;rs
38S 00
Other Expenses
14' 3;
Total Exp
3,679 89
Balance, Dec 31
1980
4,97468
Total Exp Plus
Bal , Dec 31
1980
8.654 57
Federal Revenue
Shanng Fund
Balance J a n 1,
1980
6 872 79
Recetpts
Grants Federal
10 111 00
Total Rece1pts
10,121 oo
Total Beg•nnmg
Balance P lus
Receipts
17,093 79
Expendttures
Mamtenance and
Operatton
supp11es
3,557 91
Equ1pment
2,570 74
Tota Exp
6.118 65
Ba lance, Dec 31
1980
10-965 14
Total Exp Plus
Bal Dec 31
1980
17 ,093 79
141 16 lie

~11ur~da~ ,_Apr•l16, 198.~1;;::~:;;:;,:--r-----:-;-::~T~~r#,~~=~;~~~O=h~to:;;;;---r::==============T=h=e~:::s:e:n:tt:ne=I~P=a=g=e-~1~3
9
.want~ to Buy
I KIT 'N' CARLYLE'"
Reififiiiie:... G~ne~[ 44
Apartment
by larry Wright
lor Rent

Racine Social Events

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads·
Public Noftce

-

Thursday, Agrll16,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Oh1o

--

- ·----·---

�••

'

Page-14-The Daily Sentinel

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Mrs. Freda A. Yeater; 45, Torch,
died Wednesday at her home.
Mrs . Yeater was born at
Hockingport, a daughter of the late
Lon and Rose Blake Snider. She had
been a resident of Hockingport and
Torch for her entire life.
Surviving are her husband,
Donald ; two sons, Donald W. , Tuppers Plain, and Steven Lee, at
home; two daughters, Rose Marie
Zimmerman, Belpre, and Tina Lynn
Yeater, at home; two brothers,
Harold Snider of Oberlin, and Clifford Snider, Hockingport; five
sisters, Edna Snider, Bertha
Gregory, both of Oberlin; Mary Sanbianet, Navarre; Thelma Sweris,
Amherst ; Wilma Baker, Reedsville;
two grandsons and a granddaughter.
Services will be held at I p.m.
Friday at the White Funeral Home
in Coolville with the Rev.Roy Deeter
officiating. Burial will be in Stewart
Cemetery at Hockingport. Friends
may call at the funeral home after 2
p.m. toda ~.

Pomeroy -Pollee are Investigating
the slashing of tires on three motoc
veh_icles ov~rnight. All three ·
vehicles we~ parked on Lynn St.
whentheinctdentwokplace.

Brinker Roush; four sisters, Frances Keams of Hartford, VIvian
Phelps of Middleport, Dana· Wyant
of Cheshire, and Betty Roush, address unknown; three brothers,
Leonard and Walter of Columbus
and Jay of California; and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held at
1:30 p.m. Saturday in the Foglesong
Funeral Home, with the Rev. Dave
Fields Jr. officiating. Burial will be
in Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral
· homefrom6-9p.m. Friday.
Military graveside rites will be
conducted ..

'Dress-up

Mayor issues warning

.. (Continued from page 10)
:
Delphian Chapter of the National
Honor Society and is vice presidenl
of the Writing Club at Meigs. slie
recently won her schooJ!i
nomination for the Martin W. ES5ei
SehoolfortheGifted.
''
Her hobbies are reading, writing;
playing the piano, travelll1g, and all
outdoor sporta. She is in a pre;
college course at Meigs, and allen~ .
the Pomeroy First Southern Baptiill
Church.
·

Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
today warned residents against
piling trash in the streets. Village ordinances prohibit the piling of trash
in the streets and violators will be
cited into mayor's court subject to
fines of up to $100. According to tbe
mayor, this debris washes into the
storm sewers and causes many of
them to become clogged.

'

Voi,SO,No.2 ,
Copyrilhtffl ·l '' l

_ _

Stockman

CAU 446-5287 FOR APPOINTMENT

"In the Heart of Pomeroy"

SATURDAY,
APRIL 18th
. 9:30 AM TO 5 PM

9:30 AM TO 8 PM

FRIDAY AND
SATURDAY
SALI PRICES

\

MEN'S
DRESS SLACKS
correct length, Excellent styles
and color selection.

I

\\

EASTER SALE

r

'14.95 SLACKS....... Sale '12.25
'16.95 SLACKS ....... Sale '13.85
'18.95 SLACKS ...... Sale '15.55
'24.95 SLACKS•.•.•.Sale -LU.'t'J/

1

Sizes Newborn to 24 mos.

1

2 to 4

1
,

····-

7 to 14
Reg. 15.00 ........ Sale '3.99
Reg. '8.00 ........ Sale '6.39
Reg. '13.00 ..... Sale '10.39
Reg. '18.00.......Sale 114.39
Reg. '24.00 ...... .Sale 119.19

Hal &amp; Purse Sets, Floppy
Hats, Bonnets and
Sun Bonnets.

1 Piece Suits, 2 Piece Suits
and 3 Piece Suits. Long and
Short Pant Styles.
Sizes Newborn to Size 7.

MEN'S SHIRTS
SPORT SHIRTS
VAN HEUSEN
DRESS SHIRTS
ntire stock on sale
Friday &amp; Saturday .
Excellent selection of
styles . Complete size
range. Buy now for
Easter and Spring
and Summer wear.

15.95 MEN'S SHIRTS ............. 14.75
•19.95 MEN'S SHIRTS ..... ......... '7.95
1
. 11.95 MEN'S SHIRTS ............ '955
'14.95 MEN'S SHIRTS.............'11.95
'16.95 MEN'S SHIRTS•••• '13.55
118.95 MEN'S SHIRTS ••• '15.15

20% OFF .

SALE

'lr!........ 'l4•
'2~......... slP'

REG. '6.95
PLAYTEX -

BOYS'

EXTRA CONTROL
lOP

SHIRTS

PROVIDES FIRMER
TUMMY CONTROL
THAN 'REGUlAR
CONTROL TO!&gt;S...
FOR A SMOOTHER
'lOOK UNDER CLOTHES

SALE S4•

EASTER
SALE

JUNIOR
DRESSES
Cool, light name
brand dresses .
Smart fashions
at Easter Sale
Prices!
Jr. sizes3 to 15.

sur..........'7"

PANTY HOSE

Hostages begin separate ways

EASTER HATS

EASTER SUITS

EASTER SALE

FINDLAY, Ohio - Beneath cloudy skies, lvith 31 congreulonal
memben and U slate leaden preaent, U.S. Rep. Temyson Guyer; a.
Ohio, wu burled In hla hometown.
About 400 people, includln8 Gov. James A.' Rhodes, gathered in thla
north!Vellern Ohio town to pay a final tribute to the 87-yeai'-Did Guyer,
a congreuman fMllll the slate's 4th Dlatrtct since 1973 and a slate
tenator lor 12 yean. He died In hla sleep early Sunday morning in hla
suburban Washington home.

CHILDREN'S

LimE BOYS'

Sizes 8 to 20 in a
fine range of
styles. Knit shirts,
western and solid
color dress shirts:
You really Silve
Friday and Satur·
day .

BOYS' '3.95 SHIRTS '3.39
BOYS' 15.95 SHIRTS '4.99
BOYS' '7 .95 SHIRTS '6.79
BOYS' '1G.95 SHIRTS '9.29 '

REG.

SAL(

'19.00
1
25.00
'33.00 .

'15.19
'19.99

.a ran·tees-vote change
The·admlnlstratlon ~to come up
wilh rnore \hall f/0 billion In additional buqet savings for 11183 and
Reagan ~dmlnlatratiOII suffered 111 1984 to balance the buqet, but so far
.the banda d. the Republican- · llu reailted ouWnlng specific cqts.
dominated Senate Budg~ ComMeanwhile, a t!lP Treuury Deparmittee will be reverted lllviltly when tment official predicted that the ad~ returna to work.
rnlnlatratlon's ecqnomic pollcies
Three RepubllcB!ll sided lvith the ·would moderate Inflation and that
· p8llfl's Demoerata Jut wee~ In Interest rates should moderate later
providing the' votes needed to rejecl this year.
a buqet blueprint drawn to m~t
"We anticipate u the year conthe . specifications ri. Preaident tinues we'll see further evidence ...
Reagan's tu and speodlng that prtcea are no longer surging uppropiMsalJ.
ward becatlle we have changed
But Stockman, appearing Thur· policy," said Beryl W. Sprinkel, unsday at a White Jlouse briefing, said, dersecretary of the treasury for
"I wopld guarB!llee to you here monetary affairs.
tQday" that the problem that led the
"II we continue to get stable,
t!u'ee RepubliClii)B to vote against moderate growth of money,! expect
the plan wiU be solved quickly.
that on average, Interest rates are
lie oflet:ed no detaila, but his com- going to continue on downward," he
menta echoed th011e of Sen. Wllliam told a news conference Thursday.
Armstrong, R-Cc/lo. , who voted
The administration predicts that if
agalnal the budget plan.
its pollcles are followed, inflation
"In all likelihood, we're going to will drop from a 12.4 percent rate in
be able to put It together with very 11180 to about 7percent In 1982.
llltle difficulty," a vacationing ArReagan's anti-Inflation proposals
mstrong said by telephone from include cutting the federal budget
Florida. Both houses of Congress are and urging the Federal Reserve
on a two-week recess that ends April Board to llU!intaln a steady, slow
'11.
groWth of the nation's supply of
Armatrong Wl!ll joined by Sens. money. He also has called for tax
Cl!arle• Grl!lllley of Iowa •nd Steven cuts that he contend&amp; would
Symms of Idah9 In rejecting the stimulate real economic growth.
budget proposal. They complained
On Thursday, Treasury Unthat the Reagan package would not dersecretary Norman B. Ture, a
B\l&amp;rantee the balanced budget that principal architect of Reagan's
11\e president says his economic proposal to reduce personal income
program will produce in 1984.
taxes by 30 percent over three years,

said he never suggested a compromise on the lax-at! plan during a
meeting Jut week with House
Buqet Committee Chairman James
Jones, ]).()kJa. .
The dlscussion set off a flurry of
congressional claims - and White
House denials - that the administration might accept a oneyear tax cut plan lnatead of the
three-year proposal pushed by
Reagan.
Reagan has said he is not willing

to compromise on the multiyear taxcut proposal.
Stockman, meanwhile, inaisted
that a new study by the
Congressional Budget Office demonstrates that the president's program
will maintain a "safety net" of
protection beneath the nation's
neediest citizens.
"We welcome the CBO study
because we think it demonstrates
that the president's safety net is still
intact," he said. Critics of the
president's program said the study
demonstrates how the cuts In social
. programs will hurt the needy.
But Stockman said the study,
which evaluated tile cuts proposed in
welfare, school lunches, food stamps
and public jobs, said 96 percent of
the people living at or near the
poverty line would "not experience
any serious reduction in spendable
income."

He also he conceded that spendable Income would decline sllghtly
- as much as 5 percent- for hall If
the group, about 47 percent.
Fifteen percent of the people
living on up to 150 percent of llle
poverty line would experience a gain
in spendable income, he said.
There would be no change for :W
percent.

"There will be a few isolated cases
wbere adverse impacts will oecuri'
he said.
But he also said that the study
"mllises a major point" when It
omits any effect for what the administration says will be Improvements in inflation, interest
rates and unemployment If its
program is enacted.
The CBO study said at least 20
million to 25 rnllUon people, m0111 of
them living below the poverty line,
would see their incomes cut as a
result of Reagan's proposed reductions.
It said that 51 percent of the
estimated 16 . ~ million families with
income up to 150 percent of the
poverty line would lose under the
cuts in four programs under study.
But it said that for most famillies,
the loss would be a few percentage
points.
Income for a family of four living
at i50 percent of the poverty line
amounts to fl2,615.

Meigs deputies extend tipte

400 attend Guyer's burial
.

__ _........,.,---~-------

· - --

REGULAR

4 to 6X

_,

Solution due Monday

CXlJ,.UMBUS, .OIIIb - Jobn W. Hinckley Jr-., charged !n the
llllllillltiDn ~~ of Preaident R8a,an. lltJyed 11 a Columbul
hotel before go~n&amp; to 0.)'1011 Whesi Preatdent Carter wu campalgn!ng
there, according to publilhed reports.
'
Hinckley, 25, of Evergreen, Colo., registered at the Hollday Jm near
the Ohio State Unlveralty campua on Sept. 29, 11110, the Columbus
OOpatch quole4111lidentlfled soun:e~ u uyinc Thunday.
Hinckley ,uegedly relliatered at the Sheraton-Dayton Hotel on Sept.
30, 11180, and checked out Oct. 2, the day Carter wu In Oaytoo for a
town haU-atyle meeting, the Dayton O.ily News reported.

1

Reg. '46.00 ....... Sale '36.80 \
Reg. 154.00 ....... Sale '43~- ...

\

20%

'

(

. U\ Reg. '27.00.... .. Sale '2160
. \I
~ Reg. '32.00. ...... Sale '26.40 1
Reg. •39.00.. ,....Sale '31.20 \

I

..,

Hinc~ley wa~ in Colubus too

FANCY DRESSES, TERRY STYLES
AND SETS. QUAL! T'r' DR ESSES
AT EASTER SALE PRICES

PRICES

\
\
\
\

Waist sizes 29 to 42 and extra
sizes 44 to 50 - Choose your

I

/

New
for
Spring. The latest
in styles and col·
ors.
Misses and half
s izes.

'

(AP Luerpltolol.

DRESS SALE

DRESS

~~s~~

PROTECr 111! NEEDY- DavltiS~ImlaD, Director of the Office
oiMuqemeal ud Budaet laiU wllll reporten Thunday ID Wa•blailo•
tlalllll lUI a C!Gillftllloaal tludy welcomed by demoeraUc criUc• of
Petldul Reapa'l JII'II]IOied buqel cull will aclually prolecl the tieedy.

LlnLE 'GIRLS

WOMEN'S

~·

WASHINGTON (Af) - Budget

STAFFED BY PHYSICIANS
. OF
DEPARTMENT OF FAMILY PRACTICE

SIMON'S PICK-A-PAIR

_

director David A. Stockman Is
B\l&amp;ranteeln&amp; ~t the ~lbacl! the

FOR TRIA TMENT OF ILLNESSES
AND MINOR INJURIES

Complete Your Spring Wardrobe
by Selecting from the Many Styles
and Colros of Sandals at

1 Section, II Pog11 15 Cents
A Mullilliedio Inc. Ntw•t;p:r
1

Ohio, Friday, Aprlll7,1981.
•Pom,roy=
_,. Middleport,
.

I

MONDAY • FRIDAY

Sandals

•

at y ..__...enttne

UXl UJry'o • • -~

HOURS 5 PM TO 9 PM

FRIDAY,
APRIL 17th

I

•

·•

HOllER. CLINIC LID'S
NIGHT CLINIC

Ivan J". Roush, 56, of Letart, died
Wednesday at his residence.
Born Sept. 12, 1924, in New Haven,
son of the late Millard and Reta
Lieving Roush, he was a carpenter
and World War II veteran.
He was allio a member of New
-Haven American Legion Post 140
and Mason VFW Post 9926.
Surviving are his wife, Virginia

You Save

"I" ·

The Meigs County Commissioners would need about fl2,000 additional Eg'.a·hunt Su
. nday·
and the Meigs County Budget com- funding this year in order to settle a
e
mission continued an executive strike by his deputies who returned
The Eli · Denison Post 467,
session today apparently in an at- to work on Saturday following a American Legion, Rutland, will hold
tempt to work out a settlement of . strike. They have given the county an Easter egg hunt at 2 p.m. Sunday
recent strike by deputies of Meigs five days to come up with a set- for children 12 and under. Prizes
Sheriff James J. Proffitt.
tlement or say they will resume the will be awarded. Fishing · in the
The two groups were in executive strike.
Legion pond is free to members and
session Wednesday reportedly to
A tentative agreement reached their families.
review the financial condition of the between the sheriff and the deputies ,-------------------...---~
callii for increases of 50. cents ·an
county.
It was reported that Sheriff Prof- hour, health and welfare benefits
fitt did on Wednesday reply to a let- and one-half of ii hospitization plan
ANNOUNCIIIAINT
ter directed him on Tuesday by the for the first year of a two year concounty commissioners asking tract.
Karl Rauch
various questions about his depart.
..
Friends here have received word ment. The sheriff had stated that he
would
not
reply
to
the
corresponof the death of Karl Rauch, Columbus, husband of the former Harriet dence but did reply Wednesday . Plan special session
Ohlinger of Pomeroy. Mr. Rauch providing the information
Columbia T.ownship Trustees wiU
died Saturday, April 11, following· requested.
FIRST FLOOR OF
Sheriff
Proffitt
on
Tuesday
told
meet
in special session at 7 p.m.
open heart surgery. Memorial serMAIN CLINIC FACILITY
vices will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday the county commissioners that he Saturday atthetownshiJ)building.
IN HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER COMPLEX
RT. 35 NO-RTHWEST OF GALLI POLIS
in Columbus.
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;I

Ivan F. Roush

•

A

' Probe vandalism

.Commission-sheriff
I still in conference·

Area deaths
Fre(la A. Yealer

.
'•
Thursday, April16, 198~

WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W.Va. - What may be 1a1t chapter of
a 11ga that shocked much of the world lnd Wlited America II COOling
to a quiel ending at a mountain resort 12,000 miles from where It
began.
Thlrty-ooe Americana held h•ge In Iran, bound by 444 daya d
captivity and 90 of fervent acclaim, were 11ying goodbye to each other
today and preparing to head lor new Joblln ]1011,1 around the world.
·A amall nwnber planned to slay througlt Euler weekend at The
Greenbrier, a pluah Allegheny Mounlalnl raort where they relued
and underwent medical and [ll)'chologlcal te111 for three daya.
MOlt of the former hotdages who altllnded the reunion aald they felt
It wu time to go their separate ways.

-

Rescue workers find bodies

Despite the expiration of a five
day negotiation period which ended
at noon Thunday, Meigs County
aherlff's deputies remained on their
jot. today.
DeJlutiet returned to their jobs
lait Siturday fo,llowing a strike after
reaching a tentative seltlement lvith
Sheriff James Proffitt. They agreed
to atay on their jobs for .five days in
order to give the Meigs County Commilaionen time to atudy and r!ltify

the agreement.
The tentative agreement ill a two
year contract with the first year
qrovtdlng a 50 cent per hour lnqreaae, health and welfare benefits
ll!ld one-half of the costa of
ljOBpllallzation lnaurance. Total cost
lfould be $11,9S'I. The second year
would Include health ~ · 1 welfare
!Jeneflts, total hotipltallzation and an
Increase of 50 cents an hour.
Qlunty conunluloners, joined by

members of the county budget commission, were in executive session
on Wednesday and Thursday reportedly reviewing the financial picture
of the county.
At 12:30 p.m. Thursday following a
morning executive session, commissioners informed Sheriff Proffitt
that they would "consider an attempt to come up with a package by
noon Monday, Apr1120, 1981, to try to
satisfy the grienvances between the

sheriff and his employes".
A spokesman said this morning
deputies had agreed to stay on their
jolli unW noon Monday wben the
pacl&lt;age .is ex.pected to he forthcoming. He stated that deputies
consider staying on the job as a
gesture of good faith and that they
wan! to provide help for Sheriff Proffitt over what could be a busy
holiday weekend. ''

Locks rehabilitation still justified
By KEVIN KELLY
Rehabilitating the Gallipplls
Locka and Dam II "atlll •an
economlcaUy juatlfled project," according to an official·with the U.S.
Anny Corps of Englnee....
AUan Elberfeld, chief of the
economics and navigation planning
branch In Huntington, reviewed the
corps' four-year study of problems
at the dam Thursday night lvith the
Central Ohio Valley Industrial Com-

mission (COVIC), meeting in
Gallipolis.
Elberfeld noted the major
~blem with the dam, officially
opened in June, 1937, is Ita location
at a bend In the Ohio River, making
navigation of jumt»slze coal barges
a hazard and re.tultlng In iome
&lt;4Inage to the dam itself.
:Adding to the problem is the In~ In the past 30 years of river
C(JJ111lerce, particularly In the tran-

sportation of coal and chemicals up
and down river. According to
demand projections calculated by
the corps in its study, demand for
coal and other industrial-related
products in the Ohio Valley will
jump to more than 100 percent of
what the demand was In 1940 by the
middle of the next century.
And with the Increased demand
and size of coal shipments, Elberfeld
said the present &amp;O().foot main lock

and its 360-fooi auxiliary lock cannot
handle the increase efficiently.
As an example of the problem,
Elberfeld said the average loekage
operation, or passage of a coal barge
through the main lock, took 25
minutes in 1967; in 1979, it took eight
hours.
To combat the problem, the corps
drew up five plans, labeled A
through E, and recently recom(Continued on page 12)

Vocational evaluation system in operation
A voeational evaluation system Pauletta Harrison, instructional
dealgned to a1111Bt atudenta in aide.
meklng appropriate career choices
II In operation at Melga High School.
As explained by Den Morris,
The evaluation syatem which con. auistant superintendent of the
IIIII of laboratories In C011111elOiogy, Meigs Local School D!Btrlct, apmedical services, electronics, p~tel)' 80 aludenll, Including
household wiring, plumbing, and ihclse of the Youth Employmert
ll!lall englnea is co-tiponsored by Trllning Program, u well as other
Meigs High School and the Gallia- studenta, use the labs lor a preMelgs Conununity Action Agency vocational experience to help them
and the pro,ram IB coordinated by at the conehlllon of their sophomore

year in selecting an appropriate
vocational field.
The program also offers general
survival skills, such as how to apply
for credit, open a checking account,
Interview techniques, and how to 'flll
outlorms.
Work In the labs is done during
study halls and does not Interfere
with the reguJAr course of study.
YETP is an in-achool program with
the eligibility requirements being 14

to 22 years of age, currently enrolled
in school, high risk academically,
and falling into specified Income
standards. The pre-vocational
program is coordinated with a work
program, and will be continued into
five weeks of summer when Eutern
and Southern students in YETP will
join the Meigs students.
Funding for the program ill under
CETA.

REDSTONE, Colo. - 11811cue worbn found the bodies of 1D coal
rn1ntn early today, a day and a half alter an apiOIIon ripped thrwch
the Dutch Creek No. I mine In the CoiOI'Ido Rockies, a apokeawoman
for the mine operatouald. .
The dllcover)' of the 15ih body Jllll after IUDup concluded lhe ltlrcll
lor u.,_ kllled In the apiOIIon Wednelday attarnoon, uld Marvin
Meyen, penonnel director •or Mid ~ ~ eo., which
operata the mine 30 mllel well of Alpert.

'26.39
35.19

1

Winning Ohio lottery·number
CJEWLAND- 'f1le winning nlllllblr -*tad Thunday In the Ohio
IOiterY'• daUy game "The Number" wultl.
In the weeltl7 "Pick t" pme, tbtwinrlqlltlllllllrwu a.t.

, . :.the weekly "Pynmld"lame,lhewtm~nalllllllblnwerdl; 6'12;

WRANGLER. JEANS
Basic styles, boot
flare and straight
leg. 141!2 oz. No
Fault blue denim.
Sizes 27 to 42 waist,
30 to 361ength.

5 15•~,.........

,1,.,...,

The 1cJUert raportedeamlnp ot-.maa lllldlllf pme.
'l'llllll'llinp came 111 . . _ ot
willie boldal. ot w~nttq
WI are enUUed to lhare tll7 .-.~ou.y otllalalalllld.

Weather
MGitl)' clOU(IY with a chance ot .Wwa 1 Ill' lillldlrltolma tonlihl
l.ftiiNI. C111r1ni lnd coo1tr a.~Un~~J. JIIPIIII tilt ml~ 111 a..
01 of rain 10 pii 01111 toniiN IJid 10 . . . . . . , , W1ndl norlhwliltrl)' lG-IIIIIIJb~-

YOU'nl DII'UIYMII:NT T!WNINQ PIOGIAM (1&amp;if), I CITA
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