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Strike could cause higher bills
'
By 'Ole Auoclaled PnH
While non-union operators in Kentucky's ·eastern .
coaWelda liteeled "themselves for renewed ·violence
today 8iJ they re-opened thelr.minea, the U.S. secretary
ol ~ said a p'roiongecl strike by the United
Mine Workers could reault in higher atlllty bills.
Independent COlli operalors In five counties decided
last ..S that they would reopen their mines today, the
32nd day ol the walkout, despite two shooting incidents·
involving nOIHinion truck drivers that left six men injured. .
"What we're telling you here Is that we're going to
have a war come Monday," Landmark Mining Co.
President 'l'llom4s Ratliff told officials last week. ·
Kentucky Gov. Jobn Y. Brown Jr. responded by
· saying he would call on the National Guard only If the

situation diets
. led It, aqdlng that he would n~
"babysit" non-union operators.
Many non-union mines s4ut down late last week
. after
the shooting Incidents. Ot)lers hsd been clOIIed since
the start of the strike.
Commerce Secretary Mll!colm Baldrige said Sunday
that while the nation's C9Al ei)IOrts have dropped substantlslly since the strik• hegan Msreh rr, the strike
has had no apparent itnWlct on operations of U.S. Industries.
But If it continues an~ two months, Baldrige said
In a statement, the nalion's oil imports might be
pusl\ed up .and America)ls could face higher utlllty
bills. '
Eventually, he said, , l'the strike could put trail-

sportstion workers out of job!! as coal shipments fall
off, and power shortsges could cause layoffs of faf'l.ory
workers."
A survey by the department's Bureau of Industrial
Economics said big coal users such as utilities and
steel m1Us depended on their COlli stockpiles to dull the
effects of the strike's first month.
In another development, the chief negOtiator for the
Bituminous Coal Operators Asaoclation said that only a
new con.tract proposal from the UMW would get the
BCOA back to the bargaining tab!~.
''There's no reason to return to the table otherwise,' '
B.R. Brown said Saturday.
UMW spokesman Eldon Callen argued Sunday that
"the BCOA should come up with some ideas."
"It seems like the union keeps coming up with

•

HE PAID 15 CENT5 WHEN
He We.IT 1V THE NOVIE-5.

at y

. votJG,No.•

TH~N WE ~T lO 11-4E IlCKEr

· , ·Copyrl htect 1911

•s
.Ft;!fil
H IM5f:LF; AND~ I. ~0 . R::;R ME.

WINC:OW., AND HE PAID

weekend traffic accidents In·
ve&amp;tlgaled .by the GaJlia..Meigs Post
of the Ohio Highway Patrol.
Tbe patrol said a vehicle driven by
Alan C. Wllaoti, :ID, Racine, was
westbound on SR 3381n Meigs County at 4:08 p.m. Sunday whell he
reportedly lost control and collided
with a General Telephone Co. utility
pole.
Injured were Wilson and a
pasaenger, Juanlts L. Guinther, 13,
, Syracuse. Wilson was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital by the
Racine emergency squad, where he
Willi treated and released. Guinther
Willi
treated at the scene.
Wllaon's vehicle was moderately
damaged and 'he was cited for ex·
cesalve speed,
Troopen said a vehicle driven by

n«

I

TELL THE E&lt;QG·l:APY

WEYE I-lAO IT.' ~.
!5ETTE~ YET: .IlL
TEL.L HEJV

en tine
1 Section, Hl Pages

15 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Four hurt ·in wrecks

Priscilla's Po
·'

The provision was eliminated from the proposal that
the UMW and the BCOA agreed on March 23.
Elimination of the royalty was one of the biggest
complaints voiced by miners, who rejecled the
proposed pact by a 2-1 margin.

Pi meroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, April27, 1981

Four people were injured in

WELL, NO

proposals while Bobby Brown sits back and says, 'I
don't like this, I don't like that,"' Callen said.
The two sides hsve not met at the bargaining table
since April 17, when Brown rejecled a contract
proposal offered by UMW President Sam Church.
Among other things, the proposal would have
restored a contract provision requiring coal companies
to pay a $1.9().a.ton royalty to UMW health and pension
funds for each ton of non-union coal processed.

l.rOU'LL END UP
HOLLERING AT

David J: Thaler, 19, Rt. 2, Gallipolia,
was southbound on SR 7 In Gallia
County at 3:20a.m. Sunday when the
vehicle went off the right side of the
road, colliding with a mailbox and
sign.
Thaler's car came back onto the
road, went off the left side of the
road and overturned, the report
said. Thaler was injured but not
treated, and his vehicle suffered
· severe damage. He was cited for ex·
cessive speed.
The patrol was called out again at
3:40a.m. Sunday when a southbound
vehicle driven by James R. Bray, 20,
Rt. 2, Crown City, went off the left
side of the road on SR 7 in Gallia
County and overturned.
Bray was Injured, but not treated,
and his vehicle was severely

~~~~~~lNG

datnJ!ged.
Troopers Investigated three other
minor accidents in the area over the
weekend.
1
report said a vehicle driven by
F
A. Haggy, 19, Pomeroy, was
sou bound on U.8. 33 in Meigs
County at 2:30 a.m. Saturday when
the ~ehicle went off the right side of
the tpad and Into a ditch.
Hljggy was not inJured and his
vehicle was moderately damaged.
A~cordlng to the report, a vehicle
golnl! northbound on Gallla CR 5 at
11:40 a.m. Saturday went left of center 11 a hillcrest and collided with a
v~~le driven by Steven B. McGhee,
:ID, :Xallipolia, causing moderate
damage to the McGhee vehicle.
Tlle other auto left the scene, the
repo•rt said.
Tt&gt;e patrol noted Thomas J. Mar·
tin, ·!3, Pomeroy, was not inj'ured
When his vehicle st 11ck and killed a
dee~ on SR 7 in Meigs County at 8: 4ll
p.m. Sunday. . His vehicle was
mOjlerately damaged.

HILlS . CARIP aM:tl'

vttt.MD£ .

OHIO

3

MOST VALUABLE - Voted the most valuable In
Southern Valley AtlaleUc Coaference (SVAC) at the aonual sprlag sports banquet were (from left), Greg
Wigal, Eastern, football back; MaU Queeu, North

Gallla, football Uneman; Dale Teaford, Southern,
basketball MVP; Todd Sibley, Hannan Trace, lootbaU
tract, See story and pictures Page 5.

Teachers map plans to oust members
~MONT, Ohio (AP) - As

Dallas' Joc.k Ewing dies
~

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··~

~~

UlS ANGELES - Jim Davis, the his Northridge home, where he had
gravelly voiced actor who played a been recovering from abdominal
lifetime of starring and
surgery. His wife of 36 years, Sian, roles before
the
che, was at his side, said Lorimar
the tough-as-nails
Productions spokesman Tom
Jock Ewing on the
Bishop.
'"Dallu" televlslThe S.foot-3-lnch Davis, who apon series, died in
peared in more than 150 films and
his sleep here
300 TV shows, looked as if he was
Sunday,
a
born to iplay a Texas oil baron, He
spokeaman for the
'was known as "The Man" on CBS'
·seriessaid.
·J. "Dana.,'." In a series filled with
Davis, who was
&amp;\ . ,characters everyone loves to hste,
:in h!a 70s, died at JIM DAVIS
he was the toughest.

; STOP IT/

MR$.AL6UMEI\J
IS A SWEET
PER70N'"

Return has little fanfare

disputes.

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - The spat:e shutUe Colwnbla 's return to

the Kennedy Space Center will hsve little of the hoopla that attended
Its first blastoff for space two weeks ago, or even Its original arrival
two years ago.
There wm't be any VIP bleachers, traffic jams or an army of reporten and photogaphers. The public isn't even invited. And it will be
hard to see the Columbia, riding atop a Boeing 747, because the p~
wm't '"*ke a special )111811 over 1he area to give people a good look as
he did the tint time It was brought here.

Urban leader predicts conflict
COLUMBUS, Oblo- Anational urban leader predicts conflict if the
Reqan ldmlnlllration continues what he called Its uncompi'Omlall!g
poaltlon ~budget cutbacb.
M. Carl Holman, president of the NatiOnal Urban Coalition, said confilets and lncreued unemployment·caused by reducing conununity
Ml'vicea wW ca111e the administration to adjlllll some of Its budgetaluhiDc polleies.
"Relpn firmly believes that his budget JII'UI)OII8II wW get the
naUon'a1001101ny back on the right track. And lllOIIt Americans are so
IICI1'ed of inflation that they want to believe him," Holman said.

'

New bus service gets approval
CHilLICOTHE, Ohio - CGmmutens will have city bus service for
the tint time In elchtyears when new bus service begins in December.
Lilt Jell', votm approved an income tu which would provide up to
·tDI,OOO IIIUIIly to operate a fOIJr.bua system.
B111 route1 are being established and will cover .U parts of the city,
IC.'CIJI'dlnc toMayorCiarll Aleunder.

WASHINGTON - The ~~eagan admlniltration wW be calllng on
Vlellllni wterana to volunteer to help their t.ylc!Jea.
Tcm PauUn, c~irect~Jr.deeite ~ ACTION, the ICMII ruwt'a
qeacy for volunteen, aald ACTION would begin a pilot "prognm In
. ..... - llirWIIaft memben to solicit help In jobl, COUilleliDI
• Uld o11w matten.

·

Weather
Plrtl1 cloudy IAinlllt and ~. Saltt.ftd lhowen or than- ,
dailllll&amp; ,r u.day. Lon tonlcht in~··- Jlilhl Tueldiy In
tbe loir to' mlcl6. &lt;lllnce ol rain Jl) jietcM tcapl ancj II percert
. 'l'ulldl1. Windlllll1lthwwter1y.~than1t ... tada~R.
'

' / ,''I

I '•

'

· •·1 · •Oirltr--..-WedneadaJ~'IhrndiY:~
·•'""•••
r rrww~and'l'llunday~r,·Hilbllnthe
'1111 • . . . . , ud '111undaJ, eoollnl to
Uld .....
Prtdl1..... In the mid .. to low . . "
IDtbe·~·

•

•

,

I

"

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•

The walkout began Jan. 26. Four
days later the board mailed ter·

mlnation notices to the striking
educators in an effort. to "put the
district back together" and get on
with education, sai~ Thompson.
Hichard Eiche, president of the
Mariemont teachers unio~ ·~id the
board's action poly ·hardened
strikers, some of whom he said hsve
obtsined other jobs but are prepared
to picket indefinitely.
State law requires refereemonitored hearings before school
boards can fire teachers. Dismissals
can be appealed through common
pleas courts.
Thompson said 28 hearings hsve
been held. Eleven teachers hsve
been fired and two asked to retire,
he said.
Eiche, 45, a )\igh school social
studies teacher, said the battle over
working conditiqns hinges on
philosophy of education.

~ Uld '

Eiche and other strike leaders say
Thompson and the school board
want to institute- a more structured
conservative philosophy of
education rather than the
progressive approach for which
Mariemont is known. The district
helped pioneer such concepts as
"open classrooms," ~~flexible" time
for students and team teaching.
"That's absurd," said school
board member Thomas Allman, who
said there would have been no strike
if the board's wage offer had been
high enough.
Teachers hsve propOIIed a 9.2 percent salary hike, but the board approved a 6 percent Increase. There
are about 90 teachers in the system,
and base pay is currently $10,900.
Thompson said an extensive campaign was launched after residents
approved an 8.95 mill operating levy

in 197ll to learn what voters expected
of their schools.

"We learned that our citizens, in
fact, expected our !itudent~ to be
able to write well, to be able to compute and to be able to go to universities which demand exceUence
from their students," he said.
Strike leaders fail to point out that
their proposal for a master contract
caDs for binding arbitration by an
outsider to settle grievances, he
said. Under current school policy, a
grievance panel of local residents Is
appointed to settle such disputes, he
said.
Classes are being laugh! by su~
stitutes and by nearly 40 teachers
who did not strike. The superintendent and board members are
discussing the possibility of
recruiting new teachers for the next
school year.

President gains momentum during limbo
WASHINGTON (AP)- Congress, support in the &amp;;nate and to gain
which lelt President Reagan's Democratic votes in the House. Both
economic program in limbo two seem to be working.
weeks ago, returns from recess to
The House hsd been expected to be
find momentum swinging back to stiffest teat, but he!!d COWits by both
the ailmiillstration and to hear the parties last week showed conrecuperating chief executive him- siderable new Democratic support
self offer cooperation but not com· for a slightly modified Reagan
promise.
program - perhaps more than
Reagan goes before a joint session enough to )111811 It after the House
ol the House and the Senate at 9p.m. begins debate Thursday.
EDT Tuesday - his first public apIn the Senate, Budget Committee
pearance since the attempt on his Republicans sche!luled a vote today
Ufe abnoet a month aao - to make a on a plan to allay conservative skeppitch for biB tall and budget-cutting ticism about Reagan's ability to
plan.
\
balance the budget by 1984. That was
The president spent the weekend the issue that derailed the
pollahlng the speech at his Camp president's prograln on April 9,
Dlvld, Md., retreat. White House when three Republicans joined the
spoteaman Larry s-.es said panel's Democra~ in turning down a
Reagan lntenda to t_ell Congress and budget-ctittinlj Pjickase for fiscal
a national televillon audience that 1982 because of proJections It !IIIII
"now II the lime to act" on his would leave a :Eon deficit.
program.
The propoeed tUement, which
The admlnlltration's offensive II over the week
•ppeared to hsve
~ed: to cement Republican gathered enough /support to. win ap-

Caution
residents .
.
about crank calls
'

proval, would trim the projected
deficit to $45 billion, Reagan's
original estimate.
In the administration view, that's
merely an adjuslment, not affecting
the program's basic philosophy.
Speakes said Reagan's speech will
promise to cooperate but not to cdmpromise, especially on his propoded
30 percent tall cut over three years,
which many members of Congress
are reluctant to accept.
The speech is the keystone of a
stepped-up lobbying drive.
"The big push will be on," said
Dick Legitt, an aide to Rep. Stsn
Parris, R·Va., the chief GOP votehunter in the House.
Republicans and Democrats
ready to vote for Reagan's program
in the House reportedly planned to
wear lapel pins sporting small
baseball bats this week '-- a symbol
of their willingness to "play hardball," as Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill
Jr. called It, to push the plan through

.

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Reagan will solicit assistance

'

the Mariemont school strike stret·
ch..s Into its fourth month, teachers
a~ mapping plans to ouat thrae
scliool board members up for reelection In November and the
district's superintendent says the
strike may outlast the ~Y Ravenna walkout.
'lit's a record we're not looking
fo~ward to breaking," said Superlnterldent Donald Thompson. The
Raveons strike, which was settled
Ailril13, was longest in U.S. history.
~ teachers in the 1,386stl,ident suburban Cincinnati school
dl.ltrict seek a master contract
which would ouUine working conditions, procedures for reducing the
work force and arbitration &lt;i

'

An infonnal GOP count showed at
least aJ Democrats ready to vote for
the Republican plan, GOP sources
said. Republicans hsve been circulating a list of 62 conservative
Democrats considered potentisl
crossovers, and Reagan spent much
of the last week on the phone personally appealing to Democrats to
support him.

Opinions sought

....

,.

lnlerlisted Meigs Countians are invited to review and comment on
an Initial venion ~an updated highway plan for the county,
· Thla preliminary plan focuses on Identifying the maJor needed 'local
I'Oid lmprovementa. Also covered are the poesibllltlee for road 1mcaBer:
PI otements COIII!iderlng the severe funding problems and related
aspects.
· Ameet1na on the plan wW be held at 1:30 p.m. Thursday In the Jury
lllim' acelcleat that ocewTec1 on
room of the Meigs County courfiouse.
private J11 operty Sundannotnlnllil .
'l'bere Is no charge and the meeting is expected to last about one
a local Rt. 7, Nllbt Club.
•
hour.
'
Two can collided at the entrance
Thla preaentstion and dilcuaslon will be conducted by a repreaeoill 1M ~ lat. One car wu · tatlve ol the firm ~ Jenninca Auociatea Co., the Colwnbus p~
drlwn 1'1 WilliAm Harrta, sa,
cor.ultanta een1a1 the Melp County Rellonal Planning Commillion.
PlimaOi
~ by
~ bavinl any Qllllti,OIII lillY contact Charles E. Blakflllee, .
'hn7 ......... •
'lbere
euc.1111ve
director oltbe plaJmlnjJ COillllllalon.
1111 I lilt •
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~. ~

Melp CGunty iiherltf'a deputlel you received te,ephone calls astlng
Sunday · received two complainla q•Mitltiona of ~ nature and do
tnm . local t'eliclents COIICirlllnc not wllh to Jlvb1llllt the Information
te1epbone calla they received.
advile the
IIIII tben )lana up."
Tbe flrlt CQIIPialnt came from • ·
,
•
Reedsville where a realdent
Tbe deplrtmert, inveltlpted •

received 1 caiJ tnm 1 )111'1011 attempting to ae11 macnt- .The
caller -*ed aucb penanll qlllltlotw
u 1c1 wbere the Nlidlnt Uved.lf thiy
Uvedalone,wberetblyblnbd,etc.
TbeiiC.'OIIdcaD wu to a RD, Lana
PatiiJm. nd'w I '11111 caller uted
~.Sberlff J111111 Prolftt advllecl, "If·

Congress. GOP leaders said Reagan
might wear one of the pins himself
during his speech.
Democratic leaders, meanwhile,
were worried about defectors.
"We're losing an awful lot of
Democrats," confided one top House
Democrat who asked not to be identified.
Democrats hold a 242-190 majority
in the 43S-member House, with three
vacancies. II Republicans vote as a
bloc, only 26 Democrats are needed
to earn a majority for the Reagan
plan in the House.

.

IJidf!•re-O).
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t

�. ... ~ ..... "' ' -,vuaaaepor ,, vmo

Commentary ·
-

-

They didn't give a very big play to
the Washington Posi hoax in
Madrid, and thilJ is relevant beCause
evidence of United States
degeneracy Ia on the whole lavishly
. memorialized. I suspect the reason
for it Ia that, really, Miss Cooke's
dishonor was something that fell
considerably on thilJ side of the
,Donation of Constantine or the
4&gt;1-otocols of Zion, but it is being
given treabnent about that heavy.
Let us, first, attempt a distinction
of some importance. Some years
ago, I sought to make the point that
the Pentagon Papers collected and
released with such fanfare by Daniel
Ellsberg were tendentious, i.e., that
they collected idiocies that could
only have been a part of the whole
story, unless we were prepared to
believe that the people who staffed
the Pentagon during the early and
mid-'60s were all morons. Accordingly, I assembled three or four

The Dai)y Sentinel
Ul Cuurt Strerl

Pomt·roy , Ohio
614-992·2 l!Wi
DEVOTED TO TH E lNTERESTOF THE MEIG8-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
PAT WHITEHEAD
A~~ lNtant

BOBHOEFUCH

Publisher/Controller

Genual Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated Preu. Inland Dally Pn•u A.uoclatlon ud the
Amerlfan Ne\upaper Publlsht'rs AnociatJon.
•

I.ETI'ERS OF OPINION arr "'·dcumed. Tht&gt;y lihould bt! lt!as thin 300 word~ long . All
II'Urn: art' subjl.'rt to t&gt;ditlnjl: and musl ~ si~~:nt'd with name, addrtu and trlrphollt'
numbt."r. No LUUII,~tnl'd lt'llt'rti will bto publi~ht'Ci . ~llt&gt;n; shuuld bt' In l(tiOd taltt', addr1."!i11 lng

l ~ .~ut'~ .

nut pt&gt;n:unalltlt's .

·Letters to editor
Wants dove Jaw________
der that millions are shot every year
(not to mention the unknown nwnbers that die from nafural causes)
and yet it has no noticeable effect on
their population.
Aa a sportsman, I can tell you that

unless you have plenty of spare
time, plenty of money for shotgun
shells and unless you are an expert
with a shotgun, and also don't mind
being made a food of .. . then you
might just as well give up the idea of
ever hunting mourrtina doves. Doves
are called "The Ammunition
Maker's Delight" and with very
good reason. You see, the problem is
that they are the next thing to impossible to hit, while in flight. Not
only are doves about haif the size of
pigeons, they fly at a speed that has
to be seen to be believes, twisting
and turning as they go.
I, for one, do not hunt mourning
doves in any of our border states
·that allow it, but I do believe tbst we
should have a permanent dove hiiDting season, in Ohio, for those sportsmen who wish to try their luck at
hunting them. After all, to a large
degree, sportsmen, hunters, far·
mers and others are responsible for
the type and nwnber of wildlife, that
we have in our state. - Harry W.
Hill, Columbus.
1

Today in h.istory. •

WASfllNGTON (AP) - Ronald
· Reagan is turning up the heat on
behalf of his economic program in
hopes ol making Congress see the
light.
The biggest boost in temperature
is to come next Tuesday, the day after the legislators return from their
tw~week Easter recess.
That night, in his first public appearance since he was shot March
30, the president wt1l go to the
Capitol to appeal to a joint session of
Congress for favorable action on his
budget and tax cut proposals.

It's the sort ol dramatic appearance the former Hollywood actor loves best.
The nationally broadcast speech Ia
certain to draw even more public attention than usual as the nation looks
for i~lf to see the emnt of
Reagan's recovery from the bullet
wound in the chest tnructe-1 'ly a
would-be assassin.
It will eoable the president to reemphasize his commitm~nt to
passage of his program while he and
his congressioiial audience are
aware that millions ol Alr~ricans
1

WASHINGTON (AP) - Just who
is Ed Meese? Or Dave Stockman, for
that matter'
AlotofpeopleinWashingtoncould ·
quickly answer these questions,
describing two of the powerful men
in the Reagan administration.
But what's important in
Washington may not be worth a

·.

"

.second glance In Des Moines, San
1Jose or Kalamazoo. What's clmunon
knowledge in the nation's capital is
often a mystery in the nation at
~e.

And a mystery Ia what Meese and
stockman are to most Americans.
Stockmanhasbeenthemaninthe
news with the numbers, the point

A"

·,

are watching.

"He feelB it is particularly important that he outline his views as
his program moves forward in the
legialative process," said White
House spokesman Larry Speakes.
"He is eagerly looking forward to.
the opportunity to be back on Capitol

Hill,

II

•

He might have said it was an opportunity 'Reagan and his staff
couldn't resist.
The entire lobbying effort for tbe
economic program has been a case
study on what Congress can eJpect

man in e~plaining Reagan's
economic proposals, All director of
the Office of Management and
Budget, the fonner Michigan
congressman has gained the
reputation of the chief budgekutter
in a budgekutting administration.
AfterReaganwasshot,Meesewas
seen on television time and again,

gone undetected. No fuss, no bother,
almostnohanndone.
Do not read that as arguing that
all newspapers should not be governed and judged by the same standarda of truthfulness and responsibllity. They should, but ln the real
world, all new!papen are not fhe
aame. The Washington Post and a
, very few peen have, or assrt, a
national standing. They apeak more
authoritatively and to a more infiuential readership. They are more
· equal than others, more celebrated
for their achievements and COIIo
comltantly more broadly acocowitable for their delinquencies.
'lbe Post thua hu plenty to
apologize for. What particularly burts are the First .Amendment 1mplications. When the accuracy of the
story wsa q uea ti oned by
Wublngton's authorities, tbe First
' was invoked without question to
protect the confldentiality of the
reporter'asuppclllidiiOUI"cee.
Comlng from tbe Poet, thia was
big medicine. The piper bu 1mIJOIIin8 cndentiallln the defenae of
preea fnecluma again1t gOVII1UIICIIIt
encroecbment. Let it be ••uenr
bered that u.e freedclna aerve firIt (i all the interelt of the public, to
guarantee that It wt1l be full¥ and
trutbfully informed. AI preea ·

privileges, they are significant only
asameanstothatend.
The Post in thilJ instance appears
to have acted from instinct rather
than serious conaideratioo of the circwnstances in wrapping story and
~in the First~~ at
the first authoritative challenge. In
sodolngltall~itselftobeusedin

miBuslng a principle for which other
reporters have gooe to jail and
shielding a fraud that the ewcbe of
a IIU!e healtby skepticilm oo ita own
part mlght have revealed for wbatit

was.
• The sad point II that It need never

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eKplaining bow lllllOOthly the- ad. ministration na functioning, bow
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preaentlici rCr Wiiat it irU-a cOn;
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because the dlsclolure reaulted frool '!ate hu even acquired a deejgnetim'
the not atypical caprlclouanesa of -the "newjoarllllllm,"
the Pulitzer board in reJectlnc the - Such synthesized trulb oftea can
prize Jury's initial aelectiCIII of be more eftectlve ~ lbe lileral. Of
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~ have been ~ the publicity
IJIUDOtable.
~
In Ita confe.lon, the N -'!
(Wiitdl-~, ~ "we" iD the aceepted eclitortalanother queitfoil: Dllcloaure ae. But the word II l[llll'GIII'Iate In .
follond pcllltilward Pftlil Inquiry . another - · 'l'bla lllf.lnfllcted .
into the reporter'• doctored damage to eredlbllllf and tbe rtnt •
academic credentlala, . crecleutlali Amendment affect~ all theprea I
the Poet a~ It did not · We, the 11111re ...-,1ft n11pwr:
check out In hirinC ber. Did the mere lible for ~ tbet a principle • '
claim of hciaon frGm a ..,utili• ,....,...,.... to the ••Ivai (i
ICbool mille an inlelllpnl, e~p~ble IOclet)' 8lld for wlilcb tbe ..-ltaelf
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I

SAlAD TOMATOES.~;69~

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On API'II-17, 11141, Athens fell to German lnva~ after 110 days of
Greek l'eliJtailee during World War II.
.. ..,
On tbia date:
~ '
-...,
'In 1521, Portuguese navlgato Ferdinand Magellan wli ·ll;!!led by
nativelln the Philippines.
.
,,.
In 1'111, the inYentllr of the telegraph, Samuel Mone, na boni
a.rl I 'Wii, Me.•.
In 1.,, theflrltSociiiSecurlty p1;yment namade.
In lMI, Allled force~ took control of Genoa and Verona in Italy near the

FOR

29:

LARGE ·PEPPERS••• 3FOR 89~

from the Reagan White House when.
it becomes committed to an all-cQ '
press for approval of a program.
The White House has dlatributed
to top administration officials a
blue-covered booklet entitled
"President Reagan's Progi'am for
Economic Recovery."
Called an "e~teculive briefing
book," the document containa a simplified eKplanation of the hi8h1ight of
the tax and budget progi'8iill and
also includes a sample apeech that
begins: '!lt'sa pleasure for me to be
here today."

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Pressgate~----------~----~· -~_n_a_
-~_#

...

'

II

OR

•

Are Stockman, }Ieese mystery men???

"ray II Monday, April '11, the ll7th llay of 1911. '1'l.n are 241 diyaleft

•

'

what I was thinking of saying at the bidden - Ia not entirely out of place 1 Ellen Go9dman, the colllllllll!t, a black newiiJ6pel 11011ian who
time." Others (for instance Dean
here. Miss Cooke acted badly, she writes as though Mias Cooke had fabricated a story centered on a
Rusk) reacted similarly. Ac- el[poaed certain superviso~y dimlnlabed the entire profession rl. mythic but ~ . plausible IIU!e
cordingly, tbe Washington Post ran frailties in the system, the prize was journallam, which Ia to suggest that victim of druga, to the company of
full accounts of the faked Pentagon
taken from he~ and she was fired.
the entire prOfession of journaliam the relatively untroubled blaek (or
Papers. Bac~ in the o(fice we were
But my goodness, the walling and enjoy&amp; a level of esteem the National white) drug puaben who ride
alarmed that the h08l[ hadn't been gnashing of teeth! Wben a Opinion Research Cen~ declines to · around in their Cadlilaca sowing
penetrated, and so called a preas generation ago Professor Charles validate (ninth out of 13 In in- their polson. Hyou wishtoknowwho
conference to eliJ)lain that the Van Doren was shown to have been stitutional esteem as of 1979). And · to get mad at, go back and read .
documents were forgeries, and to apprised ahead of time of ithe fn. Roger Wilkina, the prominent black Claude Brown's "Mallchild in the
give the motive for their fabrication. formation that pennitted lliJn to journall8t who writes for the · Promised Land.''
To say that the editors of the gain fame and ricltes as tf1e om- .Washington Star has gone so far as
So I say: Forget it. Probably, ne~
Washington Post (arid others) were niscient scholar on the tM,OOO quiz to say that Miss Cooke has set back It will a salubri01111 experience, aince
annoyed with us is the on the order of program, people wrote aboUt how tbe entire cause ol blsck journallsm some members of the preas have glt
saying 'that Medea was irritated the entire American acadeilty was because her misrepresentations will rather bloated notions of their aancwith Jason or that King Lear fell into . forever disgraced. The American cause editors to lower their esteem tity. Ebner Gantry was, ,on the
·a pout.
academy may be disgraced, but bsr- for blsck perceptiveness.
whole, a good tbing, reminding us of
The similarity is that just as the
dly because one of its members
Aa one member of the white the endemic weakness of the fieah
Pentagon Papers we fabricated yielded to the temptation of cupidity. majority, I'd prefer tbe company of restoring our perspective.
probably did and do substantively
exist, in other fonns to be sure, so
tbe story of an eight-year-old addicted to heroin Ia, in our wretched
times, far from unlikely. In tbia
world, routinely 1~year-old girls get
pregnant, girls even younger - and
boys - engage in sex for hire, and
get their kicks from drugs. We don't
need Pulitzer-quality reporters to
tell us what crawl under the stones
of our culture, and not only in black
Washington, but in white Easthampton.
So that Miss Cooke's dishonorable
act was less heinous than what it
might have been. She did not violate
the commandment against bearing
false witness. She was not the
worrum who took the stand at the
murder trial intentionally misidentifying the defendant and then happily watching him swing on the gibbet while she colleeted the bounty.
.The distinction between a malwn in
se and a malum prohibitum - the
distinction between that which is
inherently evil and that which is for-

Credit the Washlngton Post with
meeting its problems head on.
"We apologize, " began its
editorial comment on the Pulitzer
Prize that bad briefly been awarded
one of its reporters.
The paragraphs that followed
largely eschewed the exculpatory,
True, the .reporter's concoction rl.
the story of the blighted emtence of
Teyh~thand~·------------- an eight·year-old drug addice was
I am writing in response to Mr. people of thilJ area feel that being a labeled for wbst it was - deliberate
and Mrs. "Baffled." I stated that I patient at a larger, big name, fraud th8t had taken in her editors
could not understand why the hospital, is somehow a status sym- as well as tbe public,
But tbe editors took squarely upon
residents of thilJ area do not make bol.
themselves
the ultimate responAgain I say, try the physicians and
use of the fine facilities at Veterans
sibility
for
having
first accepted it
facilities at VMH, and then draw
Memorial Hospital.
without
sufficienUy
thorough pre- .
I speak from experience, since my your own conclusions.
publication
scrutiny
and then
I also stated that in my opinion
wife and I have been patients at
Veterans Memorial Hospital on there Isn't a better surgeon in thilJ presenting it at face value to the
part of the country than Dr. Lewis D. public. It will now be a shame, the
several occasions.
Aa far as begging for support for Telle, and I state thilJ from my own Poet believes, lf the public takes thil
VMH and its staff of physicians and personal ezperience. I also feel that one incident as symptomatic of the
the nursing personnel, I DID Dr. Telle Ia a fine, upstanding, performance and an indictment of
citizen of Meigs County, and a very the credibility of the press as a
NOT! !!!! I
whole.
I feel the residents of Meigs COUJlo fine dedicated surgeon.
It certainly will be. But deploring
Again, I am not "begging" anyone
ty and the surrounding area should
an
unfortunate consequence Is not
make use of the physicians and to support the physicians or VMH going
to make it any leu probable.
facilities at VMH and then, draw I simply thlrik they should at least
U
a
newspaper of Jess.lmpoeing
their' own conclusions. How can try the physicians and facillties at
reputation
had been involved, the fn.
anyone )ials Judgment on a hospital VMH, then they wt1l know first hand
ddent
very
likely would bave had
or a physician if they bsve never for themselves.
Sincerely. - Mr. and Mrs. Rodney leas impact. The ltOi'y might never,
made use of them??????
in fact, have been in the Pulitzer
My personal opinion Ia that most C. Spires, Route 1, Cheshire.
I'WIIIing and the fraud mlgbt line

~~lnhiatory:

--

:President turns up heat on program

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

It is very clear that the majority of
people in Ohio who are in opposition
to the hunting of mourning doves are
not sportsmen or hunters and know
very little if anything about doves.
The mourning dove is a popular
game bird in some 35 states, and it's
estimated that something over
21,000,000 are shot annually. While
this may sound like terrible
slaughter, it's actually an indication
of how many doves there are, for a
prime consideration is that all this
shooting seems to have NO EFFEcr
WHATSOEVER
on
dove
populations. Other factors, including
food, water and weather, are far
more vital.
One reason is that mourning doves
are very short·lived. Nature has
designed them to survive a SINGLE
BREEDING SEASON following
which they usually die from one
cause or another: predators,
freezing, parasites and disease are
major killers whether doves are
hunted or not.
This type dove nests in all the 48
Continental states and most of the
southern part of Canada. Because
they start nesting very early, a pair
of doves will generally produce two
or more broods in a single nestinlf
season. With this tremendous
reproductive ability it is little won-

OPEN DAYS
..-- 8 AM TIL 10 PM
CORNER OF LOCUST
&amp; PEARL ST.
'
MIDDl.EPORTI 011.

it~--~----~----------~·~
1 ~,------~WJ~m=~m~·~~~·B~oo~H~ey~J~~·

artisans and together we sat down
and in three days composed, even
unto imitating the prlllie style of
generals and admirals bd assistant
secreiaries of defense, inemoranda,
the difference between our own and
the real ones being that ours were iJl.
. telligent analyses of the
deteriorating Indo-Chinese situation
under the subversive attrition of the
North-Vietnam-backed~iet Cong.
The Washington Pos assigned us
~ small platoon of repo rs to check
dut wbst we had labeled as the
"Secret Pentagon Papers." The
results were quite extraordinary. A
reporter would call, e.g., retired Admiral Arthur Radford, over whose
signature we bad written several
memoranda, and Admiral Radford
would say over the telephone, "Gee,
fellows; ·1 don't actually remember
·those exact memoranda - but after
all it was eight years ago. But it does
sound like me, and it's certainly

u.s. GOVT. INSPECTED GRADE

Vilug an's
t

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Easy does

·-

· Pag-2:-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
•Monday, ApriU7,1911

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Page-4-The Daily sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohi·
...;;;:;:;....;_.;.;.;.;;..:;,;;,;;.:..:~;.;.._---------...;...;.::.........,;;.;;,;.;;,:;.;.;.;.;..;;..;.;;...,.....,

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While Sutter's new team ~s winning, the Cubs, meanwhile, continued to tumble by losing th~ir 12th
straight game with a 6-2 los$ to the
Philadelphia Phillies. The C~bs are
one loss away from a team record of
13 successive losses set in 1944.
In other National League games
Sunday, Los Angeles edged San
Diego 3:2, Houston blanked Cincinnati 1-0, Montreal took a
doubleheader from New York S4
and 7,jj, and San Francisco swept
Atlanta 3:1 and 8-li.
Pblllies 6, Cubs 2
Mike Schmidt's tw(}:run homer
triggered a four-run third inning to
lead Philadelphia over the slump.
ridden Cubs. The Phillies erased a 10 deficit with a run in the second on
Bob Boone's RBI grounder, then
sewed it up with their four-run third
as Schmidt cracked his fift~ homer
of the season and 32nd of his career
at Wrigley Field.
·
Marty Bystrom, .whose major

league record is now S.O, worked
seven innings and scattered six hits
for the Phillies. Bil) Caudill took the
loss for Chicago in his first start of
the year.
Dodgers3, Padres Z
Reggie Smith's pinch double in the
eighth inning broke a 2-2 tie and
Jerry Reuss scatter~ seven hits as
Los Angeles beat San Diego. The hit
was the first of the season for Smith,
who is recovering from a shoulder
operation last year and has been
relegated to pinch-hitting duty,
Steve Garvey led off the Dodgers'
eighth with a single off loser Gary
Lucas, Ron Cey sacrificed, Pedro
Guerrero walked, and then Smith,
batting for catcher Mike Sciascia,
lined a double to left-center to drive
in Garvey.
Expos 8-7, Mets 4-6
Ellis Valentine and Gary Carter
each slammed tw(}:run homers to
back the six-hit pitching of Ray
Burris as Montreal beat New York
in the opener of their doubleheader,
r

II was t)le second victory in

thre~

decisions for Burris, both triumphS
coming against his former teammates. Burris walked one and struck
out six.
Jerry Manuel hit his first major
league home run, a three-run blast
in the seventh inning, to lead the Ex·
pos to their second-game victory,
Glanls 3-8, Braves 1·5
Enos Cabell's sixth-inning RBI
double and Jack Clark's seventhinning home run triggered San Francisco's first-game victory over
Atlsnta. Doyle Alexander, a former
Braves pitcher, pitched 71-3 innings,
allowing only one run and five ~tits
against his old teammates, whom be
beat for the second time this seas'on.
Darrell Evans slugged four hits,
knocked in a run and scored twice to
help the Giants win the nightcap.
The Giants had a season-high 17 hits
as they overshadowed a three-run
homer by Dale Murphy and Bob
Homer's solo blast for the.Braves.

Lerch lo_wers ERA with ·11-1 victory .
By Ass...,ialed Press
Randy Lerch knows th e
Milwaukee Brewers are behind him
-even the guy in front of him.
That guy is catcher Ted Simmons,
on the receiving end Sunday of Ler·
ch's masterful pitching. The big left·
bander, who suffered through 19110 in
Philadelplila, then was traded to
Milwaukee last March 1, made his
first American League start an
eight-inning six-hitter as the
Brewers bombed Kansas City 11·1.
It was his second victory and
lowered his earned-run average to a
miniscule 0.64. Reggie Cieveland pitched the ninth inning.
Elsewhere in the AL, Toronto
trimrned New Yark 2-1, Oakland
beat Seattle !):4, Chicago edged
Detroit 5·4, Boston defeated
Baltimore 7-5, Cleveland shaded

Texas 4-3 and, in a doubleheader,
California beat Minnesota 7-2, then
the Twins took the second game 5-2,
"The situation got overbearing in
Philadelphia," Lerch said of his 4-14
record and 5,]6 ERA, "There was
bad blood between me and other
people in the organization, A lot of it
was my fault and a· lot of it was the
organization's, and it got to the
point, when I went on the field, there
was a very unconfident feeling in the
other players. If they're not confident in me, I couldn't be confident
in myself.
"Now I get the feeling the guys
behind me are happy to see me pitch," Lerch went on. "It's a feeling of
being accepted."
Blue Jays Z, Yankees 1
Dave Stieb, 1-3, finally got some
runs to work with - after 23 innings

on the mound with nothing but
goose-eggs from his teammates and made them stand up against the
Yanks.
T&lt;m Underwood of the Yanks is
working on a streak of his own. He's
gone 132-3 innings this year without
a run to work with and is ()-2,
A's 9, Marioers 4
Oakland made it another unbeaten
week - six more victories in a row
- as Dwayne Murphy drove in four
runs, three on a homer, and Matt
Keough pitched a six-hitter against
the Mariners.
The A's are 17·1 for the year and
11-0 on the road. Keough is 4-0 with
four complete games.
And pity Mike Parrott, Seattle's
starting pitcher. Since winning on
opening dsy a year ago, he's()-17.

r

r

¥

THAT'S WHERE nE TAGGED YOU- Secood bue IQIIplre Nick
Col01i points to leg of Clncluatl Reds' Dave Coacepcfon llltCODd bue to
show wbere Houston Aatres' Craig Reynolds applied tag lor Wtd 41111 of
ftrslillnlq, TheAatres went on towin1-0, (APLaaerpboto).

Rockets, Kings
post cage wins

HOUSTON (AP) - Houston
Rockets Coach Del Harris told his
Wblte Sox 5, Tigers 4
team to play the Kansas City Kings
Pinch-hitter Bob Molinaro drilled as if they were in the final game of
a tw(}:run triple in a three:run seventhe National Basketball Association
th inning that extended Chicago's
Western Corilerence finals with only
winning streak to six games and 48 minutes separating them from
Detroit's losing streak to seven
elimination.
games.
The result was a stunning per·
A walk to Greg Luzinski, Lamar
formance by center Moses Maione,
Johnson's single, a hit batter and who scored 42 points and grabbed 23
Carlton Fisk's sacrifice fly produced
rebounds as the Rockets decked the
the first run off Milt Wilcox before Kings 100-89 Sunday,
Molinaro, batting for Greg Pryor,
Meanwhile, the 76ers, led by Julius
tripled to right, Lance Parrish
Erving's 20 points, beat Boston, 107·
homered for the Tigers.
105, Sunday to take a 3:1lead in their
National Basketball Association
Red Sox 7, Orioles 5
best-of-seven Eastern Conference
Jerry Remy's hitting gave Boston final series,
its first two runs in the eighth inning
The Celtics twice trailed by 19 in
and his heads-up baserunning gave the first half, and were behind 65-48
the Red Sox the last of their three at halftime. Their star, Larry Bird,
which helped carry them past had been held to six points, only one
Baltimore,
field goal.

ht

way when he hits the ball, and that
one didn't go very far. But it almost
went far enough,"
Reds starter Mario Solo tasted
another hard-luck defeat, giving up
just five hits in seven innings. Only
one other hitter besides Wailing
reached third base.
Soto is now a deceiving 1-3 with a
sparkling 1.74 earned run average.
"Aside from San Diego, we
haven't given hlm too many runs to
work with," said Reds Manager

Jolm McNamara. "Obviously our
hitting isn't what we would like it to
be right now."
The lead-off homer was a matter
of Walling guessing right.
"I was looking for a fastball," said
Walling, who had a W count when he
hit the home run. "I didn't know I
was going to hit it out, but I was
leaning on it."
"He had to expect a fastball," Solo
said. "I didn't want to walk him
leading off the inning, so he should

Redmen win doubleheader
Dan Knost set a new college
Rio Grande College's baseball
team trailing S4 going into the record in stolen bases with four on
seventh inning, exploded for four the day and 24for the season.
In the opening contest, Rio won 3:1
runs to take a 9-8 win and sweep of a
doubleheader SWlday at Walsh behind the three hit pitching of Dave
Wright. He struckout three and
College.
Tom Boomdale led the Redmen issued two walks.
Larry Stalls led the Redmen with
with three hits in three trips including a home run, Larry Carter three hits in four tries. Carter and
had two hits as did Jim Freppon. Wally Wolfe had two hits apiece. The
Rob Day was the winning pitcher in wins pushed Rio's record to 12-9
overail and 6-4 in the MOC.
relief.

be looking for a fastball if I fall
behind. There was nothing I could
do.''
Knepper, a left-bander who came
to the Astros over the winter from
the S8n Francisco Giants, tossed his
second consecutive 1-0 shutout. He
said he was glad to get away from
chilly Candlestick Park.
"It was like working four years in
a coal mine with a dirty scarf on
your throat," Knepper said.
"There's something about playing in
the bay area that's depressing,"

lnsu~J~nce
l)o

-44G·4524

SVAC CAGE CHAMP - Carl WoUe (rigbt),
Soalbero basketball coach, accepts lbe teain tropby for
lbe top SVAC basketball team of the 19110-31 season
duriog tbe spriog sports banquet at Buckeye Hills

Package

Career Ce*r In Rio Grande Saturday, Making the
presentallo~ Is Ted Lehew of North Gallfa, SVAC
president.

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for .; &amp;tate Auto Mutual's ,

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super,lor featu~es
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mall the,b,lndv r.ouoon.
--DALE C. WARNER
INSURANOE

a·- ·

'

Syracuse,
NOW OP!i'N FOR
SPRING SEASON
e Potted.Plants
• !=emplete line of oe~IDU191
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'stATE

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MARTINSVILLE, Va. (AP)

~askets .

All Dozen Packs 9$C do:t.ll~l
Daily 9to 1

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wir-------...;...,
V&lt;
The Daily Sentinc:l
114!.

!USPS IIO:Mil)
ADh'ialoa of MulUmedlll, lat .

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Publlatdn!! Company , Multimedia, Inc.,
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TIES IT UP - Indla01 ruuner Rick Manning ties the game up S-3 on

Jorge Orta'saacrifice fly to ceater field agalast lbe Raallersln the nlnlb
btnlng Sunday Ia Cleveland, Gettlnc lbe tbrow too late Is.RaujJen' catcher Jim Sundberg. Tbe lodfannoa the game W. (,u&gt; !Ampboto),

. · . ·.

•.. ·.

money problem, Ohio ~le
know where to tum. To City I.oan. Boou~ oobody
knows you-and your needs-like we oo.

.IIII I
01,

I

Annual NFL draft slated Tuesday
through 1986. Prior to that, the draft Cleveland, Buffalo, San Uiego,
had been ruled illegal by the courts, Atlanta, Dall811, Philadelphia and
but the union and club olfr1ers Oakland again,
Among the other premier players
agreed upon a revised version which
likely
to go before the first round enhas yet to be tested.
The biggest running back - in ds sre a trio of defensive end·
reputation, not size ~ In thiJ year's linebackers - Hugh Green o Pit·
draft is George Rogers of South tsburgh (winner of the Lombardi
Carolina, almost certain to be aelec- Trophy Uthe nation's top lineman),
Lawrence Taylor ol North Carollna
ted No.1 by the New Orleans Saints.
and
E.J, Junior 0! Alabama - aloog
The rest of the first·round order is
with
safeties Kenny Eaaley'li UCL,\
the New Yorlt .Giants, New York
Jets, Seattle, St. Louis, Green Bay, and Ronnie Loti of Southem ·~.
Tampa Bay, San Francisco, Loa running bec:U Freemaa McNeU ,ct
. Angeles, Cincinnati, Chicago, UCLA and Randy MeMIUan of Pitt,
Baltimore, Miami, Kanaa.a City, ·wide receivers David Veraer of KanDenver, Detroit, Pittsburgh, Min- 118 and Mart Nlcliola ol San Joae
neilota, New England. WashiJII!ton, state, and quarterbecb Nell IAnu
Oakland (from Houston, u partial ol Portland state and Rich Campbell
paymentfor 11g91 end Dave C81lper ), of California.

, NEW YORK (AP) - Twentyaeven teams in the National Football
'League belong to scouting combines,
.thole computerized professional
'organizations l'hich scour the world
for the best pigakln proapecta.
Oneteamdoesnot.
·
Gue811 which one.
U you said the Oakland Raiders,
110 to the bead.bf the clasa - where
the Raiders bappen to be theae days,
AI Davia, the NFL's Machiavelli
(or Mephlstopheies), Is a man alone,
He prefers to operate outside ~

~ oon't ha~ to tell you about
the high cost of living these da~. But

prlres aren't all that's going up. 'I1le
value of your oo~a Is, too. In fact, it's
\\1lrth far more today than ever before.
At City Wall, we can help you
tum that locreaslng value into the
money you need to meet major
wants or ~. Uke a college
~Qil.ion. Or ~ng the
• house. Or to make a special
dream come true. With a
Homeowher Wall of up to
$50.~ or more.
11m it comes to ~lving a big

Center Saturday were Jack Junes (left) ol Soalb:
western and Ralpll Wigal, albletle dlreelor of Eaatel'll,

annualaprlng sports baDquel at Baekeye Hills Career
J,

•''

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usual channels.
He's going head*head with Com:
mlasiiDtl' Pete Rozeiie and the rest
of the league over whether hla
lllllden should be allowed to move

'

...

.'

'

, o1,

from OUiand to Loa Angeles. And in
the nat couple of daya, be just
might break 10111e more new ground.
'lbe NFL draft will be held
. ru.tay and Wedneaday. In 12 rounds, the best of the nation's colle11e
lelllora will be divvied up by the
leape. In the flrlt ~ of rounds
(blrrine IAicb IJI'IIIjl«&lt;ed develop.
merdl u dlfeetiOIII to the Canadian
Gallla Academy Hl8h School's
Football Ltqae), they'll be picking
Blue Anliela defeated Melgl, 23-t, In
"IIUnl thinp," piiJen virtually
Jlllnnlled to mille the ~IIW!en a makeup game at Rock Springs
-IIIII toiiiiU lllefrllll tar~ SaturdaY.
- - of 1111 att.dkll of • bettary - the victory left GAllS with a H
season mark, Inside the
of -*"Ia.
' , . drift u It -~~~~~~~- .... Soutbeutern Ol!fo League, the Blue
prond 111 the lelpe and die AnatllbnprovedlbeirlllllrktoW.
,.•••• llllkill Ill ,....., 11'17 •
Rlnee Halley wu
.
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Jllrl al I flf•J,• Clllld'fl tile wilL Andria Halllald lllrpiniDc . . . . ,.,. draft · dlllrpdWilb tbe loll,
GAllS bed 2S runa oil 11 hill. Meiga
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Blue Angels whip

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more about
Homeowner Loalts
than City Loan.

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FOOTBALL CO:CIL\MPS- Acceplln&amp; INpbles 111

Nobody knows

or rookie winner of a Grand National
se stock car race on the Winston Cup
re circuit since 1979 when he coasted to
victory in the Virginia 500.
Dominating the last 200 laps on the
.a~mile Martinsville Speedway
track, Shepherd drove his Pontiac to
an an easy triumph over Neil Bonnett's
co Ford. Ricky Rudd was third in a
re Buick, followed by Harry Gant in an
lis Oldsmobile and Terry Labonte in a

Ray werry, Greg Wigal,
Hannan Trace: Tim Murphy,
Todd Sibley, Craig Chapman, Bruce
Waugh, Greg Maynard,
Southern: Danny ·Talbott, Terry
McNickle, Scott Nease.
Kyger Creek: Bill SwiBher, Bill
Rose, Terry Porter, Ken
Coughenour.
Individual haskethall trophies
went to the following, who were
voted as the three top teams of the
season:
Fil'!lt Team: Dale Teaford,
Southern; Kent Wolfe, Southern;
Gene Cole, Eastern; Dale
Newberry, Southwestern; David
Sands, Kyger Creek; Greg Webb,
Hannan Trace.
Second Team : Billy Blackburn,
North Gallia; Tim Dill, Eastern;
Mike Bissell, Eastern; Todd Baker,
Southwestern; Jay Burleson, Southwestern.
Third Team : Robert Brown,
Southern; Keith Payne, North
Gallia; Terry McNickle, Southern;
Scott Russell, Southwestern; Jeff
Moles, Kyger Creek.
Guest speaker at the banquet was
John Lawhorn, Rio Grande College
basketball coach, who reminded the
athletes to be wary of their success
• and to remember the sacrifices
made for them by their parents.
Speaking from his own ex·
periences, Lawhorn recalled a few
"ego-deflating" incidents from his
high school and later coaching

career.
''I hope you as athletes thank your
parents for the sacrifices they made
so that you could be involved in
athletics," he said, "Basketball h8ll
been a tremendous way of life for
rne,,but I regret one thing : that I
didn't tell my dad, 'thank you, I love
you very much.'
" I know this may sound a little
corny to you, especially for a man at
age 40, but there isn 'I a week that
goes by that I don't call my mother
and thank her for everything," he
continued.
Lawhorn said his first cosching
job was with a high school with a 3-63
record, which he helped turn around
with his first five wins.
"I thought I was the Johnny
Wooton of basketball-then the night
came," he said. "We not only lost,
we were killed, Afterward, 1 the
school superintendent put his arm
around me on the way out and said,
'You know, that was the worst ·
exhibition of basketball I've ever
seen. You'll be here forever', Two
years later, he helped me find a
· really good job."
Lawhorn told the audience one of
the best things about athletics was
not the scores, the wins or the losses,
but the feeling of companionship an
athlete gets from being on a team,
"The players I remember are the
on~ who played with everything
they had," he said. "That's what
athletics is all about."
In charge of the event was SVAC
President Lehew, who was assisted
by North Gallia girl athletes Becky
Hash, Margie Thaxton and Tana
George,

Watson wins New llileans tourney
burst of three birdies in a lour-hole
stretch over the last nine.
He won it with a 270 total, 18
strokes under par on the 7,~yard
Lakewood Country Club course that,
Watson said, is "maybe a little too
easy, It's probably the easiest course we play on the Tour."
"With the greens as big as they
are, and given these playing conditions, we're going to shoot lights
out every time," he said.
The victory, worth $63,000 from
the total purse of $350,00l, came only
two weeks after Watson had won the
Muters and extended his history of
making successful title defenses and
scoring multiple triumphs. The out·
standing player in the game since
1m, Watson now has scored21 of his
27 career triumphs in only nine events. He has successfully defended
tournament'tities six times since the
start of the 1'm season.
And he'll be looking at another
title defense in his next start, He'll
skip this week's Houston Open and
will next compete in the Byron
Nelson Classic, which he has won
four times, including the last three.
Bruce Fleisher came out of the

pack to take second with a 6-under·
par 66 and a 272 total. The second
place check of $37,800 was not only
the largest of Fleisher's career, but
also was more than he'd won in any
of his previous 10 seasons as a
touring pro.
Morgan, tied with Watson for the
lead much of the way, dropped back
to third with a 71-273, Barry
Jaeckle was next at 69-275, Tied at
276 were rookie Fred Couples, Lon
Hinkle, Ron Streck and Jay Haas,
From a tie lor the top, Watson
nailed it down with birdies from 10
and 6 feet on the 11th and 12th, padded his margin with a :!()-footer on
the 14th and then managed to save
par after hitting one in the water on
the 15th, giving him a three:shot lead
with three holes to play,
But it was Morg1111's putting
problems over the front that gave
Watson the opportunity to win it.
"If Dr. Gil had putted at all, he'd
have won the tournament," Watson
said. "He hit the ball very close to
the hole on the first seven and made
only one putt. If he'd had three or
four birdies, got three or four in
front, he'dprobably have won."

Two top fillies eligible for derby

~~ Wins Virginia 500
of Morgan Shepherd became the first

Eastern: Mike Bissell, Dennis

Durst, Rodney Keller, P .G. Riffe,

Andhedi~.

AUTOMOI1LE
MUTUAL I
INSURANCE
COM I'ANY

Ph,

~Howell.

He salvaged a 89 in that round,
followed that with a brilliant, 8:
under-par 64 that put him in a tie for
the top after 54 holes, then pulled
away from Dr. Gil Morgan with a

I

Representing

North Gallia : Keith Payne, Matt
cllueen, Don Shupe, Charlie Lookado,

nament."'

.l,HW. Main "H1U. ~•· •

Hours :

By K2VIN KELLY
· RIO GRANDE - The rivalries put
aside for another seAIOO, athletes
from au ,six of the area high schools
were honored at the Southern Valley
Athletic Conference (SV AC) spring
bl!nquet at Buckeye Hills Career
Center Saturday nigbt,
Shal'irig the team trophy for foot·
ball co-champs of the .191111 season
were Southwestern and Eutern,
Highlander cosch John James and
Ralph Wigal, EBiltern athletic direc:
tor, were on hand to accept the
trophies on behaH of the league,
The Southern Tornadoes were
honored with the 1~1 buketball
trophy, accepted by Coach Cal-l
Wolfe, Ted Lehew, SVAC president,
and Vice President Paul Pettit, both
of North Gallia, made the presentations.
Voted as football's most valuable
back were Greg Wigal of Eastern
and Hannan Trace's Todd Sibley.
Football's most valuable lineman
award went to Matt Queen of North
Gallia.
The honor of being the conference's most valuable player was
Southern's Dale Teaford.
The trophies, CCHponsored by the
Ohio Valley Publishing Co. and the
Wagner Broadcasting Co, of
Gallipolis, were presented by Bill
Gray, general manager of WJEH·
AM and WYPC-FM.
The conference football first team
was also announced at the banquet,
and its members are:
Southwestern: Kevin Enunert,
Scott RUSBell, Dale Newberry, Jay
Burleson, Scott LewiB, Ron Hammond,

NEW ORLEANS (AP) - The
minor disaster of a triple bogey-7
early in the tournament served &amp;!
the turning point in Tom Watson's
victory in the USF&amp;&amp;G New Orleans
Open Golf Tournament.
Watson returned to that jarring
experience - a shot out of bounds
that could have knocked him out of
the tournament - after he'd scored
a tw(}:Shot triumph in a successful
defense of his title.
"That was just stupid," he said of
the triple bogey in Friday's second
round. At that point, he was far out
of contention and was, in fact, in
some dlmger of missing the cut for
the final two rounds.
"I was really very mad at .·
myseU," he recalled Sunday, "I just
had a little talk with myself, 'That's
stupid, Really stupid, Get your act
together, With a few good ahota you
can get back in the golf tour-

ou own or operate a

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S31 JACKSOH PIKE · Rt. 35 W!IT

The Daily Sentinei-Pa!!e-5,

r

:P.oJ Icy ... !I modern-as·

. Walling's bat, glove tops Reds, 1-0
HOUSTON (AP ) - Cincinnati
Reds pinch·hitter Mike Vail thought
he had muscled a Bob Knepper pitch
Jll just enough for a game-tying single
to - until he realized he hit it at first
nc baseman Denny Wailing,
v&lt; " I thought 1 had it over his head,"
Vail said. "But I should have known
g~ not to hi tit to him. It was his day."
es Walling, the hitting and fielding
21 star Sunday, turned in a tumbling
th over-the-head catch to end the Reds'
sll best scoring threat of the game in
of the seventh inning and preserve the
pr Houston Astros'1-0 victory.
sll Knepper pitched an eight-hitter
W and Walling rapped a lead-off home
Jll run in the first inning for the game's
fo only score as the struggling Astros
m salvaged one victory in a four-game
homestand aga inst the Reds.
ar " It wasn't any kind of 'hot dog'
dE play," said Walling, moved into the
Bl lead-off spot Saturday by Manager
wl Bill Virdon to put more punch in the
ca powerless lineup. ''I had no recourse
fr• butto dive forthe ball.
m
"Mike Vail can hit them a long

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Trophy presentations highlight banquet

•

Sutter spells Cards' relief
By Ass...,iated Press
What a relief it is for Bruce Sutter
to be out of Chicago!
"It's a Jot more fun when you're
winning ," says the new ace of the St.
U&gt;uis Cardinal bullpen.
Sutter is responsible for much of
that winning, of course. On Sunday
he saved another game for the highflying Cardinals as they defeated the
Pittsburgh Pirates 3:2 and boosted
their record to 9-2, their best start
since the World Series-winning
season of 1946.
"We're having a good time right
now, " said Sutter, who pitched for
the Cubs last season and saved 28
games. "I've got .a lot of good friends
on that Chicago team, but I'm a Car·
dina! now. We'vP got so many good
ballplayers here and it's really great
being in St. U&gt;uis."
Sutter, by the way, seems to be
just as effective as ever with his
enigmatic knuckle-curve. He's
saved four games so far for the Car·
dinals.

,Monday, April 27,1981

--~---------------;.;!",;;0;on,,Fa~v·;.o-A,;:.P.Ii !:IW1,1;.;,2iii7.iillii91iilio1.
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had three errors. Melgl had eight
· runs oa seven hill, GAm 1118de
lhreeerrora.
Shelly Dodson and Halley paced
.the winners with three hill apiece.
Natalie Lambert paeed the loaen at
the plate.
The GAHS·Ironton game
scheduled Friday wu 1'lined out. A
date will be 8I1DOUl1lied,
w'
- .llAil'l wUt play at
Wen.ton In a~- outing,

LOUISVILLE, Ky, (AP) - There
will be a crowd of S.year-olds in the
Kentucky Derby next Saturday, but
it doesn't appear any of them will be
fillies trying to duplicate Genuine
Risk's 191111 Derby f~t,
Two top fillies, both eligible for the
one and one fourth-mile Derby, sre
stabled at Churchill Downs.
One is Heavenly Cause, the 191111 2year-old filly champion who in four
starts this year won the Fantasy and
then the I.a Trolenne on opening day
at Clu/fehill Downs Saturday, a!)d is
the rjcbest S-year-old in training
with career earnings of f438,401,
TIJe other is Truly Bound, unbeaten in six starts, including two
last year and the Fairgrounds
Oaka and the Ashland thiJ year.
Trf¥ner Woody Stephena said Sun·
day that a declaion on whether to
start ,Heavenly Cause in the Derby
would be made Tuesday, but "moat
llkeb! she'll run in the Oab,"
"I lhi;;t the people (owners Mr.
and Mrs. J.P. Ryan) have made up
their Jnind to run the stake for fUlls

stakef

(the Kentucky Oaks next Fridsy),
and I think they're right," Stephens
said,
Trainer Bud Delp said Truly
Bound would start in the 11-16-mile
Oaks.
"The size of the (Derby) field is
wha' scares me, not the quality,"
Delp said Sunday. "There's no sense
running in the Kentucky Derby just
for the prestige of winning the Der·
by, It won't increase her value any."
He set that value at $2 million.
Of course, a Derby win increases
the breeding value of a colt.
Always A Cinch, the California
Derby winner, was injured while
finishing last in the four-hol'!le Stef)'
ping Stone Purse Saturday and will
not start in the Derby, which looks
like it will have the :!()-horse limit.
This limit is based on career money
earnings and was established after
23 raced in 1974 when Cannonade
won.
One of those who could be kept out
of the race by the money rule is

Mythical Ruler, winner of the Spiral
Stakes and the Stepping Stone.
Among the hopefuls, who will not
be bothered by the money standard,
are Arkansas Derby winner Bold
Ego; Well Decorated, the Bahamas
winner who was second in the
Flamingo; Santa Anita Derby champipn Splendid Spruce; Wood·
chopper, first in the U&gt;uisiana Derby and third in the Arkansas Derby;
Flamingo winner Tap Shoes; Wood
Memorial winner Proud Appeal, and
Cure the Blues.
Cure the Blues is trained by LeRoy
Jolley, who sent out Genuine Risk to ·
become the first filly to win the Derby since Regret in 19!5, She is owned
by Bert Firestone, whose wife, [)ian.
na, oimed Genuine Risk.
Jacinto Vasquez, who rode
Genuine Risk in the Derby, Willi
taken off Cure the Blues after the
colt finished third in the Wood
Memorial for his second stratight
loss after six consecutive wins. Bill
Shoemaker replaces Vasquez.

For the record. • •
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Pag~,-6- Monday, April27,f981

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APR. 27, 11181

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Unscramble these lwr Jumbles,
one Ieier to eadi square, to form
four ordlllBfV Vtords .

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mouthpiece

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8:00 (I) •

.,,
."',
. '"""
I ill

Appalachian musical/ore highlights ...
'"
Tuesday·meeting of Salisbury PTO
,..,:"'&lt;f

A program of Appalachian music dancing toys and the relating of tall
and folklore by .Roger and Mary tales. An . afternoon perfonnance
Gilmore highlighted the Tuesday wasgivenforthe~. ·
night meeting of the Salisbury
New officers e~ and installed
Elementary School PTO.
were Mrs. Robert Sloan, ~dent;
Using a variety of musical in- Mrs. Arland King, Vice president;
struments including dulcimers, Mrs. Robert Robie, 8ecretary; and
autoharp, five string banjo, the Mrs. Phil Harrlaon, treasurer.
Jew's harp, and a washboard, the
Mrs. Robie and MrS. Charles Warcouple presented tunes such as th W\ft appointed to the auditing
"Shady Grove," "Cripple Creek," conunittee;
"Old Joe Clark," and "Soldier's
Phil Harrison and, Roger Young,
Joy." Roger also played an original basketball coaches, presented
composition, "Sweet Mountain trophies won in the tournaments by
Sound" and other highlights in- their teama to the principal. They
cluded a dulcimer-autoharp duet of will be displayed in the school trophy
"Greensleeves/' Mary's clog- case.

ble addpling to life as 10
Engllahrtlan .
GD OVER EASY Gueats:Henny
and Jinl Backus . Host : Hugh
Downs. (Cioaed·Captioned;
U.S.A.)

Principal John LiBle announced ·;
May 5 as the date for. a muaical .-:; ,
progr!IID by the students of .Ed .! :
llarkless vocal music lnstruc!Dr. . ,,, •
The next' PTO meeting will be held ":~: ;
on May 12. An art display by Mrs. ;~· .
Debbie Hill's students and a concert ,;~
by David Bowen's band students will ·:i
take place then.
.,.
Wle also announced that the corn- ~
rnunicatioiiS councU win meet on .:
May 18. The PTO voted to buy award ·~
ribbons and po)lllickles for field day.
Girl Scout troop 11110 led in the ' '
opening pledge. Miss Rosalie story .
bad devotions. Ed Bartels' sixth "
grade won the room count award.

8:30 (I) 1J I1J NBC NEWS

ffi

THE PRINCE AND THE
PAUPER, PART I'The Paupet
King' M•k Twain's c lassic tate
of two boys, one a prince, the

BORN LOSER

IIX:U;(;&gt; 'lOu ~~t
OI~'T TAU&lt; 1D iW

AI..L'?

Work exemplified
for 2 candidates at
Harrisonville Eastern Star meeting ...
,....
.

••
J .•

MUSICAL - Gerald Spencer, as Hugo; Fred
Young as Frank Frankenstein, and Danny Riggs, as
Mike, the monster, Ito r, rehearse a scene from the upcoming musical, "Frankenstein Follies" to be given at

8 p.m. Friday and Saturday by vocal studenls In the
Meigs High School Auditorium. Dlrecllon Is by T. Edwin llarldess, vocal music superviBor, and Cella McCoy, a faculty member, iB serving as drama coach for

the production.

1

Auditorium. Here, the two rehea~e a scene from tbe
lw&lt;&gt;-act, two bour musical, entllled "Frankenstein
Follies."

Breast surgery traumatic--help for
victims available through ACS
By S. Michael,
Public Information
chairman
Hello," said the attractive
smiling stranger as she walked
into the hospital room of a woman
who'd rece ntly had brqast
surgery.
She introduced herseH, "I want
you to know I was where you are
not too long ago. Now I'm up and
about and doing things with my
husband and childen I never did
before."
It was a beautiful moment in a
gloomy situation for the patient.
Hope began mounting, and her
spirits perked up.
" That stranger was an
American Cancer Society Reachto-Recovery volunteer," explained Erma Cleland, Crusade
chainnan of the door-to-door canvas now going on in Meigs county
during the month of April. She
was talking to a group of new
volunteers during the current
11

educational and fund ratsmg
Crusade of the American Cancer
Society. "That woman was just
one of thousands who visit
hospitalized women in the shattering and bewildering days after
breast cancer surgery," the ACS
leader went on. "The ACS volunteer will bring encouragement,
demonstrating how to talk with a
newly acquired voice. He or she
will be someone who has learned
esophageal speaking after having
lost a larynx to cancer.
"On the other hand, the patient
may have had surgery for
colorectal cancer, and now has to
eliminate waste matter through a
stoma - an opening in the air
domen. Again, someone who has
already had the experience will
bring encouragement and hope.''
Thousands of thsoc personal
dramas take place daily across
the country and they are part of
the society's rehabilitation
program, according to Cleland.

Bes ide making bedside
visitations, members of the International Association of
Laryngectomees. sponsor the
training of speech therapists and
other assistance for people
who've lost their voices through
cancer surgery. The IAL baa 295
affiliated clube in the United
States and abroad.
The American Cancer Society's
Ostomy Rehabilitation Program,
originally aimed at assisting
colostomy and urinary ostomy
patients, baa been expanded to
aid all ostomy patients - including those with ileostomies.
" In all these programs, visits
always are made in cooperation
with the patient's physician,"
Cleland said. "The -ACS believes
it's not enough for one to merely
survive cancer. it is the quality of
life that ligures Into one's total
cure and rehabilitation."
If we can help you in any way,
call 992-7531 or stop at the office
on Mulberry Hts.

PISCATAWAY, . N.J . (AP) Needless to say, from the point of
view of good, criap, concise writing,
a clwnsy sentence like this one
would hopefuUy never slip pkt a
good editor's eye.
Neither wouid it escape, the
Writer's Workbench, a sharpj-tYed
new electronic editor being
developed here at Bell Laboratories.
The Writer's Workbench Its a
collection of computer profirams
that . scan and analyze E1gllsh
language prose. It looks fo the
things that make writing ba and
suggests ways to change them.
Like a neW!ipaper copy desk
veteran, Writer's Workbench weeds
out spelling errors, flags ~c­
tuations and snares split lnlini~ves. ·
It balks at cliches or freq~ently
misused phrases and words s ch as
"needless to say," ''from the p lnt of
viewof"or "hopefully." .
On corrunand, the program Ij!Wers
its green eyeshade and gets dE to
subtleties. Are the sentences short
and varied? Aretheverbeacti e? Is
the writer overusing big wonb?
Writer's Workbench lan't ;~nded
to replace the human editor, tJle Bell
scientists say.
"What we can do is take sOOie of
the burden of copy edilin8 off elntors
and free them to concentra'te on
more Important things, like the ·
ideas, structure and logical development," said paychologist P~tricia
Gingrich, 30.

6EE, AfR.1 I
~1\G HOP/H' "~DDY"
••()H

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~OULD AL~EAOY

WHEREVE~

IT 15
' I'IE'RE 601H'··!

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1170 rt?T
~ELIEVE HE WILL
BE DETAINED
LONG. YOU WILL
SEE HIM 500'i.

IT CAH'T BE
TOO FAR.
AWAY IF
I'IE'~

ONLY ASFARAG A
P~ IVATE

NEAKSY

AIR-

FIELD, CHILD. HIG
PRIVATE JET Av.11TG 05.

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Sharp-eyed electronic editor from Bell labs
Bell executives are .interested in
Writer's Workbench as a way to improve their technical documents.
But the program is not limited to
wrllln8 about switches and wiring.
Students at Drew University in
Madlson,~.J., used It last semester
to analyze their Shakespeare
papers.
Transplanted to a business office,
Writer's Workbench might speed
secretarial chores or defog the
executive memo, its authors believe.
, Newspapers and magazines could
use it to cut typographical errors
and discourage lazy wrilln8.
"We were worried at first that
people might object to having their
work analyzed by a computer," :JG.
year-old PllYCholingUIBt Nina Macdonald said. "But we find a lot of
people like it. lnltead of having a
bolla write all over your paper with ·
red ink, it's just between you and the
computer."
.
The Bell seienlllts have consolidated and imprvved earner
programs that checked spelling or
computed a lllandard "readability"
!!COre for a tezt.
Borrowing from writing
authcirtties like WUHam Strunk Jr.
and E.B. White, who wrote the
classic "Elements of Style," the
scientiatl created a program that
examlnel a piece of writing in detail.
The program "pl'llle," for example, may compiiment a writer 011
having varied ~ structure

AMAZING! 'rOll CLEARED

. but chide him for overusing the
colorless verb "to be."
The program "proofr" looks for. :::
spelling, punctuation and diction ~::
errors. Another program, " sexist," ...,.
even flags sexist appellatiOIIII like
"career girl" and "office boy" and
suggests changes.
-· • •

"It's an at\emllt to put to use the
kinds of things writing boob tell you
to do,'' computer scientist Lorinda
Cherry, who wrote many of the

liNDA lACALO'S

~ET

11-iE ENllRE ROOM! WfiO 11-iE NAME ! I'M
ARE 'YOU?
AN EXPERT IN

TH' ltJJY

FINISH! I \IIIINTA
HEAR WHI\t SHE

GOVERNMENTAL
OI&lt;GANIZATION
-'ND EFFICIENCY!

HA.S

rs-"'1':

•
'

•

.,
-·
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'

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programs, said.

'

· "What we don't warit Ia to see the
suggestions taken as hard and fast
laW!i," said Lawrence Frase, &gt;15, an
educational psychologist. Instead,
he explained, the suggest101111 are
supposed to malt:e writers think
about what they've written and consider whether It can be improved.
The program doesn't make
changea, it only suggests them . .
That's because the computer can
make mistakes. A word considered a
blatant error by the spelling
program may be only a proper noun
that doesn't happen to be In Its
50,000-word electronic dictionary.

...
~

We are honored
onh~ because I am so
·sweet an' kine"!

,. " :
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,"

-'

-

ch8alr-a~ ·0Pus 35'. (60 mina.)

~ ·

Ill! NOVA ·oo We Reolly Need

-'
.

the Ro cki es ?' Locked in the
shale of the Western Rocky
Mountains is moreoilthanin the
whole of the Mid ·East, but will it
solve our gasoline ahortage or

·•

'

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.

~~

....

" •

.-.
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--.
.-

Two grou)lll of Bell technical
writers are now testing Writer's
Workbench. BeD may even market
the program as an addition to its
popular Unilt; operating syatem,
used by many colleges and com-

BUT YOUR
MOTHER'SHOIYEPI

paniea.

UPAFTER YOU

HAl' LEI'T I'OR
THE STATS ANP
:;HE NEVER SAW

,, .
"•I.

SHE GOT THE PA5•5-I
PORT AND OTHER
ntiNGS FROM A
fJRAZILWI AND SHE

SOME "'A'(

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HOW

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TELL THAT,

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POSGESS IOl-.15

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THAI M16HI 6c

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ACQUIRED 6Y
PL..AYIN(S AROUND
· Wll'H THE' LAW.

I I JI

I

Ptintanswernere :
Saturdey·s

_

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer. as suggested by1he above cartoon.

"[I xx1 1 ]"

(Answers tomorrow )
RATIF Y PASTRY
An swer· What a good taxiderm ist kn o w s~
HIS STUFF

I Jumbles

BUSH Y

FRU IT

J1mblt Book lilo. l S; containing 110 puules, is ava ilab le tor $1.75 postpaid
hom JUmblt, ~o ltlisi)8Wspa per, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648. Include ~oor
name, ,address, zip code and make cMcks payable to Newspaperbooks.

BRIDGE

'

The obligatory finesse
I

I

lly Ds-.jald ltbby
ao~ Alan Sontag
!\'ORTH
+ Q2

Alan! "In our current Satur·

.t 769

day ar1ticles we have been
showinf how to play certain

A 62

+ AK85~

car.d oombinations involving

one palticul&lt;r suit. How about
a few articles to illustrate' "
Oswald: "Rere is an exam·
pl.. of a play known as the
obUgallry finesse. Needless to
say there is no one holding a
· gum tq dcdarer's head and
!orting him to take it. It stmply is • ~~·~ that can wm lor
you anH can t cost you a tnck
1f you lake it."
Alatt "South finds himself
in fou r "'ades. Ma ybe North
siloulde't nave bid three. May·
be South shouldn't have btd
four. It doesn't matter. That's
the contract he has to play."
Oswald: "East takes his ace
and q_, of hearts. Then he
shifts to th e j ac k of
diamonds."
Alatt "South has lost two
tricks and expects to lose two
more. He wins the diamond in
his own hand and leads a low
tr1111p. West's ten loses to
dummy 's queen and the deuce
of trumps IS led back ."
Oswald: "East pla ys the
nine aad now comes the obli·
~atory

finesse. South ducks.

as.111,~
lt11 THOMAS
ACROSS
I Roman
statesman
5 Participate
10 Waning
: 11 Inhabit
l
! 13 Frog genus
.' 14 "Shake, and Roll"
15 Uncble

4·27-81

WEST

EAST

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J97
AQJ 104
J 107
12

SOUTH
+K 86543
• 95
t KQ 4
+9 6

Vul nerable: No rth -So uth
Dealer: North
West

Nortb

t+

2.

Pass

3.

3.

Pass

Pass

East
I 'I'
Pass
Pass
Pass

S.ulh

I.

2.

••

West has to play his ace and
South gets away with JUSt one
trump loser. Luck, of course.
but he had given the cards a
chance."

•.,

JOSEPH
43 Adolescent
IJOWN
I Medii. tree

2 Wide open
3 Principle
4 Seraglio

room
5 Walk
6 "I - a
Rhapsody"

(poet.)
7 Ending
16 Craggy spot for combat
17 Malayan llllf 8 Nautical
II Seamen's
rope ladder
chapel
9 Expand
20 Businells
12 Designated
concern
16 Make
21 After ksy
known
zt "Pimic"
19 Songstress
playwright
Reddy

Yesterday's Answer
20 Aflame

31 Actress
Papas
sacred
32 French
beetle
river
24 Tinted
33 Become
25 Not
night
knowing 35 Custom
26 Annapolis 38 Sloe mascot
3!l Cambodia 's
28 Flinch
Angkor Z3 Egyptian

wilt it simply turn the Rockies
into a gigantic industrial zone?
Z30ar
NOVA explores the promise
and the problemS of shale oil.
Zl Avarice
(GloBed -Captioned ; U.S.A.)
Z7
Nose (60 min B.)
Z8 CoU~tge
8:30 (JJ NEW BIBLE BAFFLE
SHOW
.
in Iowa
I!IIII®i tME TWOOFUSNan
and BrentWood are in lor a big.
Zl
actor,
surprise When , each.thir1king·
tes
the otherja out of ICJIIrNn , they·
30
of tire
both retur home for weekend
34Tiff
:
' t
rendezvo"*·
8:58 (JJ CBN~ATENEWS
35HW!llr
ll:OO (D8 ffi ~lYE FROM STUDIO
· 3t Weti(Sp.)
BH ' 100 ~ars Of America 's.
37 Regilln
Popular M~Bi c' Geor'-e Burna,
Paul Sim&lt;tlll, Sarah Vaughn ,,
&lt;~8Pun
Steve Latwrence and Eydieo
39
Occifent
Gorme , 1-tenry Mancin i and
Gregory Hines wr ill loio
40 Strait near
compoe. er•conductor Jack El·
~· · ~+--+-liott and tl"e New American Or·.
UKalherine
cheBtra tc:t this must:al cetebra tion of 8 centyry of Un lorgett •
- PQrter
able melodies· from Joplin and
u~~
Sousa thtough Presley and
~IBn. (2 ~. )
.
; ,
W 700C UB
ffi MOYI -(IIIYSTIRYI ••
DAIL CRYPT~QUOTE- Here's how to work it :
" Dro11od o Kill"
,
AXYDLBAAXR
(l) ll2J. !IIMERICAII DREAM
TheN011a~amily , turned up aide
II L 0 N.G F E L L 0
down by tfleir .move ~rom the
1
co mforts ct a Chicagoluburbto
Oae ll!tter aimp1y stands for another. In this sample A Is
a mlud ~er·clty •eighbor ..
· uaed fo• tht three L's. X for the two O's, etc. Single letlers.
hood , trle to cope with an ex, apoalro~bea, the leneth ond formation of lhe words are all
ploa lve co fllctbetweienDanny
1 bini$. Efdl day the code letters are different.
and his so , Casey, that began
when Dan y'a moonlighting at
CBYPTOQUOTES
Caaey'a gh achool inadvertently leadto Caaey'a accwea·
lion by hl ablaaamatea of being
!(!
D UQQCJZU ,
HUQG ;
1
a ' an ltch4tr' on student drug
users. (60klina.)
fQN'UZ
D
SZA,
CSN J
NR
G (]) llJ1 M.A.S.H. KllnQtr · .CI
arcuate tconcern .tor hil '
behavior
en he till a into •
; DAW NDK ZTTC . - UNCCXDA RUQPZUV
deep dep aalon after recelv·
\ Ctyploqtlole: WHAT IS HONORED IN A COUNlnga 'O..r ax:i• ' l.tttrfromhi~
ex·wlfe, L ..me. (Atat) 1
(I) Ill!
TO MAK MUSIC
'Porlrelt t ltzhak arlman ~
Hailed aa ne of the reatei•
Pe. (AP) - Some 100 color 1
viollnlata
our
Pert_~
m1n's
'ferae • r~partolr•
of the IHe, work and people of modem
demonatratea his ulti(Jiatalent.
hlng shown 1t the Musewn of Art, Carnegie
Thiaprooramotferealbokatthe
man and the mualclan. (80
' through May 24.

.,..-,-,...,.-;T,-,

~ng

ntOUGHT YO(.J
MIGHT fJENEFIT
E!Y THEM IN

I!ILL EIEFORE.

...

' (\.'

other I hit son of a beggar, born
onthesame day anddeatlnedto
look alile. When fate brings
them together , they decide to
switch places.
Cil BOB'NEWHARTSHOW
Ci) ANDV GRIFFITH
0 CIJI!Dl CBS NEWS
II) WILD WILD I'IORlD OF
ANIMALS
(jJ) LILIAS. YOGA AND YOU
ruJ ID AIIC NEWS
6:58 (JJ CBNUPDATE NEWS
7:00 CD D PM MAGAZINE
(JJ
NORMAN VINCENT
PEALE
(I) Al~ tl THEF ANI ILY
1Illl2J8 FAMILHEUD
ffi NASHVIlLE ON TIE
ROAD
1!1 (l) TIC TAC DOUGH
II) (jJ)
MACNEIIA.EHRER
REPOR'I'
@ NEWS
7,30 CII D BIJLLSEYE
CIJ WOftlS OF HOPE
sPoR'rs oYNNSrv: THE
NEW YORK YANKeES Follow
60 years 'of New Yorlk baseball
rrom !heigolden age ~Babe
Ruth to the controversial Steinbrenner ~era and meet l ivinQ
legendsMtickeyManl le, Whitey
Ford andiYogi Berra'.
(f) SAN~ORD AND SON
Ci) CIII) JOKER'SWILD
ffi @1
HO(lYWOOD
SQUARBS
IIJ(jj) DICK CAVETT SHOW
ll2Jm FACE THE laJSIC
7:58 (JJ CBftlJPDATE NEWS
8'00 CIJD CD liTTLE HOUSE ON
THE PRAIRIE Wheil Laura •e
dream o~ be coming a school·
rea che r $am es true, Almonzo
Wilder is rorced to realize thai
she is n~ longer a little girl.
(Repeat : 60 mine.) (Closed·
Captioned; U.S.A.)
·
(JJ AME.ICAN CAll!OLIC
ffi liDODI!PARISSTARRING
SHIRlEY MACLAINE Sh irley
Ma clai rte andT om Jones aI ar In
this dauling musical specta cular, featuring the Lido' s
Bluebell Girls .
Cil MOVE ·(COMEDY) "l'o
"l'dRathBtBeRlch" 1964
(l) IUJ 8 THAT'S INCRED~
BLE A. professio nal motorcycle
sruntman challenges a speed·
ing car t o a daring duel iMide a
tunne l ot fire : a victim of the
my at eriou afiery force known a a
spontaneous human c ombua~
lion and one of lla few survivora
relives tis terrifying exper-ience;and a maglclanper1orma
sle ight of hand Illusions .
(Re£!tat: 60 mins .)
CIWI!Dl PRIVATE BENJAMIN
Wh en Captain Lewis comes
down with the llu on the eve of
her liaaion with Captain Bra~
dock.Benjaminnurae!iherback
toheallh with a lillie T.L .C, and
an abuadanc e ol
Pinky
Sunrises.
II) GREAT PERFORMANCES
·o rmandy Conducts Tchaikovsky ' Eugene Ormandy conducts the Ph iladelphia Orchestra with ltzhek Perlman asoueat
solois t in an all· Tchaikovaky
program
wh ich i ncludes
'Romeo and Juliet' aa well aa
the concerto fo r violin and or-

m

were Donna Nelson, warder, Doug May4; Belpre, May 6; Valley at Me- ':".
Bishop, marshall, and Stella Atkins, CoMelsville, May 18; Bartlett, May ·conductreis.
21; Pomeroy, May 29; and Mt. Olive,
Past matrons presented were June 10.
Pearle Canaday, Ayanell George,
Thank you note was read from the "'
U!ls Pauley, Janice DeBord, Mar- Goldie Wyatt Lynch family for
jorie Rice, Joan Stewart, AJ,Iegra flowers. Pauline Atldna reported
"'
WiD, Pauline Atkins, Donna Nelson, that the bake sale was a success. A
U!is Thompson, Stella Atkins, Betty sympathy card was signed for Ber- .;"
BiBhop and Ruth Erlewine. Past nice Nelson in the death of her ...
patrons 1 introduced were Doug father.
BiBhop, Stanley Kaldore, Norman
Aspecial meeting was set for May ,::
Will, and Harold Rice.
5 with work to be exemplified for one :;-Invitations to inspections were candidate.
...
.
&gt;*
received from 'I'h!!a Chapter, April
Refreslunents were served by ':." :
29; Aureleus at Macksburg, April Connie Smith, Louise Wen, Ida Mae ~­
30; Point Pleasant, May I; Racine, Staniey, Audrey Well, Donna Cobb, ·-:..
and Donna Morris.
""7.
•

LEADS - Linda Eason and Jeff Carson play the
romantic leads In the annual musical of the Meigs Hlgb
School Vocal Music Department to be given at 8 p.m.
Friday and Saturday In the Meigs High School

,

·~'·

Work was exemplified for two candidates, Mildred Jeffers and Clara
Mae Jeffers, at the Tuesday night
meeting of the HarrisonviUe Chapter 255, Order of the Eastern Star,
held at the Masonic Temple.
Joan Kaldore, worthy matron, and
Chester King, worthy patron,
presided at the meeting with King
a1111ouncing the father-son banquet
to be held on May 16.
Guests were Mr. and Mrs. William
King, Mrs. Kathy Johnson, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert King, Evangeline Chapter; Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Knowlton,
and Mr. and Mrs. Jearl Quick,
Albany Chapter. Pro tern officers

me Cll iiDl ll2l •

NEWS
(I) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
ICOIITINUED
FROM
DAYTIME)
CIJ CMIOL BURNETT AND
FRIEND6
III ABC NEWS
(I) PADDINGTON lEAR In thia
program, Psddington hastrou·

u rt /

HIS

ulso

FACE

ai-t

w

I .

•J

I

.
I

I

ftov,&gt;/DAY
~tuTLAND GARDEN CLUB, 7:30
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Marvin
Wilson, Rutland.
MEIGS COUNTY JAYCEES Monday at 8 p.m. Election of officers. All
members urged to attend.
TIJESDAY
MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY Area
Branch of the American Association
of University Women, 6:30p.m. dinner meeting at the Meigs Inn.
Howard Frank, Meigs County
Auditor, to talk on county ,government and finances.

'

.
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN CWB,

"'r:

.'

Tuesday at the Meigs !1111.
7:30p.m. Tuesday at the Middleport
AMERICAN
LEGION
First United Presbyterian Church. AUXIUARY, Drew Webster POBI
Mrs. Lennie Haptonatall and Miss 39, Pomeroy, 7:30p.m. j0intmeelin8
Nellie Zerkle to be hostesaes.
of Juniors and seniors. Mn. Charla
IDGH SCHOOL NIGHT for eighth Marsball to have the progrsm.
grade students and their parents.
Principal James Diehl and CounNames omitted
selor Tim Flesher, Meigs High
School, will discuss high school
POMEROY - A report on the
program, course choice, ete. Studen- recent BloodmobUe report failed to
ts and parents invited. ~resh­ list the loUowing worlt:en:
ments will be served by members of
Cl!rtcal worker; Lula Hampton;
the Parent·Teacher Forwn.
paramedics, Louis V1ughan,
OIDO ETA Pill CHAPTER, Beta Karolyn Black, June McOougal,
Sigma Phi . Sorority, 7:30 p.m. Kay V.vlaand Pat Va~.

~QN ' UZ

-

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....
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m!jntllld . . a;

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I TJ.liNK I JV5T LEARNED
SOM~IN6, MARCIE

~fOUR MAT~

STICKS TO

m"""

~fOUR t.~tllu •

tl""''·

mlno.l
illl AMI!RICANSHOIITITOIIY
'The Jilting of Granny Weather·

.all'

'

~~-.:.:.t:~,BE::
. ~~:::;:TIV:.:.;_:A:;.TE=D:.THERE:..:=
. :=·:....:..PLA::.:.:,TO;;..,_,__,...,_,~"
· · a~otos
·

H,

n. pictaree were taken by photojournalist Eve Ar-

:\Oid.llhe ITIIde two trlp!l to ChiJ_1a in 19'19 11111\ traveled 1
· nearlY 40,1100 lnllt•t

.. I .

�Friendly Circle meets
A post-Easter prOgram was enjoyed recently when the Friendly
Circle met at the Trinlt~ Church.
The worship centl1r f1111tured
Easter lilies and an arrimgement of
dogwood and wild spnng flowers including bleeding heart, jack-in-thepulpit, white violets and spring
beauties. Scripture of the resurrec- ·
lion, pQelll!i and a readiDg were
given for devotions with the group
singing "In the Garden" followed by
the offeratory prayer.
' Legends and symbols of Easter
and those which evolved from psgan
rites and ~rvances WljS the theme
of Mrs. l&gt;errin's prllgfam. The
pagan s(ll'ingtime ritesl of vesper,
the sUIU'ise observance, of the sun
worshipers, the Eastet egg, hot
cross buns and the Easter rabbit
were all discussed in connection
with Christian customs.
It was noted that the lily, so
prominent in Easter o' rvances,
i
a
flower of purity and h · ty, has
been used in only the pas 100 years.
Corning first from Berm da, it is not

Infant Golowenski

New arrival
Goloweuskl
David Joseph and Elizabeth 0.
Blaettnar Golowenski of Lorain are
announcing the birth of a son, Matthew Davtd, on March 20 at St.
Joseph Hospital in Lorain. The infant weighed seven pounds and 14
ounces and was 21 inches long.

I

the lily mentioned in the scriptljl'es.
Mrs. Perrin said that the daffodils,
called Easter lilies by the older·
generation, are, no doubt, the lilies
of the field of scriptural writings.
The center cup, she said, is symbolic
of the cup at the last supper. The
legend of the dogwood tree and the
story of the first colored eggs com-·
pleted the program.
Mrs. Donald Hauck conducted the
business meeting. Appreciation
fnm Mrs. Bertha Reibel for the
Easter lily was reported. It was
reported that a recent basket order
has been delivered. Miss Mary V.
Reibel was named flower chalnnan,
and Miss Elizabeth Fick, card chairmarL Upcoming church projects
were discussed. A card was signed
· for Mrs. Philip Meinhart. The
Lord's Prayer in unison closed the
meeting.
Miss Reibel and Miss- Chapman
served a dessert course using a
spring motif.
Favors were
potholders.

Miss Price
has birthday

Latisha Price

For pie If you ore looking
tor 1 home to buy, I have
.several below merkel
'price. John Sl1eets, 31fo
·miles south of Middleport,
Rl.'7.

Phone ·
J-(!14}-992-3325
fNEW LISTING- Sum·
mer home on the Ohio
River. 1968 Fleetwood
mobile home with 3
bedrooms, 1112 baths, ex·
cel lent drilled well,
stove and refrigerator,
gas F.A. furnace and 3.7
acres. Only $13,500.
STATELY FAMILY
HOME - Distinctive 4
bedroom home with 2
lull baths, lar" rooms
and nice birch kitchen,
central- hear and wood·
burner, full basement,
attached 2 car garage
end large glass enclosed
patio.
RACINE - 10 rooms
just remodeled. 5

Civic beautification plantings at
the Zion Church of Christ and at the
entrance to Wolf Pen Road will be
made by the Fernwood Garden Club.
Meeting Tuesday at the church,
the club made arrangements for the
plantings and alao to host the May 4
meeting of the Meigs County Garden
Club Association at Trinity Church.
Several members will also attend
the Region II meeting to be held at

Hamden on May 16.
New.officers were aiOminated ·~d
will be voted on at the May meeting.
Mrs. Jan Knapp was hostess for the
meeting which opened with the club .
collect and devotions by Mn.
Thelma Giles. Mrs. Giles read three
poems, "Better, Wise and Happier,"
"The Magic of Love" and "We
Thank Thee; Lord."
For the program each member

brought an Easter arrangement. ,
These included one using five red :
tulips to represent the five wounds of• '
Jesus, another was an Easter basket'· ,
filled with eggs, lilacs and daffodils, ;
WhiJe Others Were Vases of quince, ' I
dogwood. lilacs, narcissus, and · '
corkscrew willow.
:

..

'

..

Next meeting will be May 21 with
Mrs. Thoma.

bedr;ooms,

PubliC NOtiCe

Public Not1ce

ORDINANCE
NO. 1109·81
An Ordtnance to A PPROVE, ADOPT AND
ENACT THE 1981
REPLACEMENT PAGES
TO THE CODIF IED OR·
DlNANCES: TO REPEAL
ORDINANCES IN CON·
FLICT THEREWITH; TO
PUBLISH THE ENACT·
MENT OF NEW MAT·
TER ; AND DELCARING
AN
EMERGENCY .
WHEREAS , ce rtain

provisions within the
Codi fied Ord inance should
be amended fo conform
with State law as required
by the Oh 10 Constitution;

and

---

,

WHEREAS , various or·

dmances of a general and
perma nent nature have
been passed by Counc il
which should be included in
the Codified Ordinances;

and
WHEREAS, Council has
heretofore entered into a

contra ct with th e Walter H
Drane Company to prepare
and publish such revision;

ana
WHEREAS,

the

new matter to be adopted,
the matters to be amended
and those to be repealed

are before the Council;
now, therefore :

Be It ordained by the
Council of the Village of
Middleport as follows:
SECTION I. The or·
dinance ot the Village ot

M iddlerort, Ohio, of a
genera
and permanent
nature ,
as revised,
recodified, rearranged and
consolidated into com POnent codes, titles, chapters and sections within the

1981 Replacement Pages to

the Codified Ordinances
are hereby approved and

II.

The

following sect1ons and
c~apters are hereby added,
amended or repealed as
resper. t i vely indicated In
order to comply with
current State law :
Chapter 301. Definitions

1

"1-----------------------·-a

l

dinances or resolutions, or

consistent or in conflict

l

I

I
I

be

Savell I

Wrtle your own ad and order by mai l with this
coupon Cance l your ad by Phone when you get

results. Money not refundable .

I!l

PHONE 992·2156

11

or Write Daily Sentinel Cla.sslfied Dept.
111 Court St., Pomero,, 0., 45769

I

II

I

Name - - - - - - - - - - I.'II

!Phone_____._______• Iii
1

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

Address

1
I
I

Print one word 1n each
I space below. Each in
itial or group of f1gures
I counts
a word. Count
I name as
and address or
I phone number 1f used .
I You ' II get better results
I 1f you descr1be fully,
j give pn ce The Sentinel
reserves the nght to
I classify
, ed1 t or re iect
I any ad. Your ad will be

I put in the proper
I clasifi ca tion if vou ' ll
check the proper box
I below
I
I
I I ) Wanted
I r. ) For Sa le
) Announcement
I
) For Rent
I
I
I
II
I

1.

eANNOUNCEMENTS
1-Card or n.anlts
2- ln Mtmtrum
l-Announnmtnls
4- GivttW.IW'
~Happy Ads
J- Y .lrd Stlt

9-Wanted to Buy

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

11 - Htlp Wtfllft

12-SINt.... Wtnted
ll-lrtSUrtfiCt
l._luslnns Tnlnll'lt
Rid~,

It-

·

52- CI, TV, Reclio !qviJ,nHI
SJ- Aat!Q. .s
Sot-Mite. Mtrchlftdllt·\
15--IVIIII"f IU,.III
st-Ptts ftlr Salt

These cash rates
1nclude discount

tv

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

I CIR ...Ir
lt-wnntN To Do

•! - Farm lqulfllmtt!l

e FINANCIAL
21 -

12-W'"'" to luy

72- tru«:ll:l tor S•lt
d - Ll vtttoclt
M-HIY &amp; Grtl•
65-- Sttll I prtrtlllltr

IUslnns
Op,ortu~tily

17. _ _ _ _ __

1~-------Ji
19.
_ _ _ _ __

22- Money,. Lotn

U- Prot.SiiCMMI
S.~iCtl

l

-.

71-'utes,.,. ....

20 · ---~~......

11-fiiiiiiiMtt....-.

U I PI

21
22. _ _ _ _ __

,,_,.,.,....., ltlt

'1:...... ''"'
&amp;AC:C:tl..,ltl

23 · ----~-

l+-lu1~ lvttlll.,. ,
Jf-Lets I Acr.....
H-RNII1taN WIIMH
U-WHitor-1

" - AuteltMir

------------·f

30._ _ _ _ _ __
31 . _ _ _ _ __
9 ---'----10. -_ 11.
_____
32 . _
33._
12. _ _ _ _ __
34._ _ _ _ _ _ _i:
13. _ _ _ _ __
35. _ _ _ _ __

President of

14) iO, 27, 2tc

1 15 - - - - - -

1 16. _ _ _ __ _

3

Announcements

STOBARTS Greenhouse is
now opened. It is located on
Racine Rt. 2, C.R. 100.
Hanging baskets S. bedding
plants. Vegetables &amp; plants
01 all kinds.
Giveaway
4 beagle puppies. Great lor
childs pet. Approximately 9
weeks old. 247·3584.
4

Council

SUMMER YOUTH
EMPLOYMENT
PROGRAM
The Department of Ad·
ministrative Services, Office of Manpower Develop·
ment IOMD) is announcing ·
th'e Fiscal Year 1981 Tille
IV Summer Youth Em·
ployment
Program
(SYEP).
Through the Com ·
prehensive Employment
and Training Acf !CETAJ
the Department of labor
has allocated $8,628,647 lor
.;1rvl\dri!l ,l the SYEP in the 56 county
"
Balance of State region .
The purpose of the SYE P is
to provide economically
disadvantaged youth with
work experience and opportunities for vocational
explorat ion, training and
access to . career in formation and counselin~.
Additional
1nformat1on
may be obtained from

6

mailing work . No ex: .\"
perience requlred . AP,- ....

Lost and Found

Lost : Siamese Maltese cat,

PLY: Circle Sa les, P.p. ::.

12 years old, answers to the

Box

name of Cindy. Lost is the
area of Fronland Garfield.

992-70'15.

'

Lost: Gold wedding band.
Reward. 992·7315.
LOST :
large

Reddish · brown
purse

containing
valuable papers &amp; money.
Lost around vicinity of

Jones Boys. Edith Teaford.
Reward. 992·2253.

SMALL young miniature
' collte wearing Ilea collar &amp;
dragging tong chain. Found
Chester D. While, 1160 near Veterans. 742·2833.
Dublin Road, Columbus,
OhtO,(J215.
8
Public Sale
&amp; Auction
w 27, ltc
Farm Equipment Auction,
Sat., May 2, 10 a.m . Siders
Public Notice
Equipment Ca. 1 mile S. of
NOTICE
Pt. Pleasant on U.S. 35. 61!r
Notice is hereby given
consignment
that Sharon Johnson 3440.
welcome.
Jessie, Mother of Zelia An·
drea Jessie, who resides at
Box 385, Pomeroy, In the 9
Wanted to Buy
County of Meigs, State of
Ohio, Intends to make ap· WANTED TO BUY :
plication to the Common GOLO,
SILVER,
Pleas Court , Probate PLATINUM, STERLING·
Division of Meigs County, COINS, RINGS,JEWELR·
Ohio, for an order to
change her daughter's . Y, Ml SC. ITEMS. AB·
MARKET
name to Andrea Oawn SOLUTE
PRICE GUARANTEO. EO
--==~=-c--- ·1 Jessie, age three (3) years .
Public Noltce
Said ap~llcallon Is set tor BURKETT
BARBER
hearing 10 the Common SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
Pleas Court. Probate
Division of Meigs County, .OHI0992·3476.
Ohio at 10:00 a.m . on the
28th day of May, 1981.
jOLD COINS, pocket wat·
Dated this 24th day of chn, class rings, Wedding 1•
April 1981 .
, bands, diamonds. Gold or
Shoron Johnson J~ssie . silver.
Call J. A. Wamsley,
(4) 27. ltc
Treasure Chest Coin ShOp,
fAihens, OH. 59H221.

'·:.===;::::::::::;::::===

EVERYBODY
Shops the

I

WANT
AD WAY;
__ _ _ asx _.
......
_,.....
....... .,......... .., .

Want~ to Buy : class rings,
wedding bands, anything
stamped, lOK, 14K, or 18K
gold, Sliver coins, pocket
watches. Call Joe Ci:tark at
992·2054 at Clark's Jewelry
Store, Pomeroy, Ohio ID69

22:.-o, Ri chmond

NY 11418.

- - - - -- - - - .

Need someone to move, iiJ:i:!
tact, 2 small buildings. 110x10 the other lOxJO. 'IYl. ;:!
7680.
•

2: liP .M. DIII'f

II NNn btvrU¥
lttM..... V

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

-----------

.'

Kerrs Run area .

' .

Now taking applications
lor lifeguards. Apply
weekends at Royal Oak
Park.

...y.

8395.

----------------- =
Pari time help
wont~ ·· -:

'teaching macrame ,'
,needlepoint, rug hooking, •
stained glass. II YOIJ can' '
work 12 hours per week call
for Interview 156-9363 Mrs. ,
Daniels.
•
·:
·

I

c..,..l.H

....

1.11
Ul

1

1

I

Mail Th•s Coupon with ~emittance
The Daily Sentinel
\ Box 729
·~ ·
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

ouse and large lot in Syracuse. Six
ntlar pool and recreation park.
finance .
CALL 992·2720 OR 992-3589

~f=:::~:~~~====n~~~~~~~~~

Sells torS2,800.oo.
JUST LOOK AT THIS 1979 Windsor home.

31

mlcro·wave oven and

pet.

underpinning,

stereo

are

for Sale
1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65,

three bedjooms, new car·
1911 Cameron, 14 x 64,
two bedrooms, new carpet.

among the many
1972Champlon,12x60,two
features to this home. I '!"&lt;!rooms, new carpet. 1976
All of 1.93 acres with ' Cameron, 12 x 60, two
2 0'~t14t' buiAidinoodg •bnd
bedrooms, all electric. 1971
1 rut rees. g
uy Skyline, 12sx 6), tws
al$27,600.00.
bedrooms, 'bath &amp; '13, new
RUTLAND - 4yrs.old,
carpet . 1970 PMC,
' total electric, 3 bedroom
12 x 60 , two bedrooms, new
horne on approx. 1 acre · carpet. B x s Sales, Inc.,
1'12 baths and carport ·2nd x Viand Street, Point
with utility shed. Asking
Pleasant, wv Phone 675·
$32,000.00.
4424.
Cheryl Lemley, A5soc.
Phone 742-3171
Velm'a Nlcinsky, Assoc.
Phone 742-3091

Two-Part Aattery

J

",..,..,,,c..... ,.,.,, ... oo11..., , , ..,. ..,.,.. .....
'" 1"''"""'· c..............
,..,.....,...N..teNnl'llutt~•re•Cn•tMOfiiY'wtr~te~liwf•
.
·~ cfllr,. lor.., corrv••• '" ••mtoor •• c. .. et Tilt

::!::;.:•

'"--------,..---·-··-·--·-·--·-·.. -·'111.-----.---:---,.---------.. .-

56

f'OMEROY
LANDMARK

· St.

years ~

old; I walker pup. All VKC
registered. Call 949·26fil
anyday alter 4:JO p.m.

fktH

i,

I

I

SERVICE
ytater-Sewer- E 1ectr1c
Gas Line-Ditches
Water Line Hook·ups
Septic Tanks
county Certif1ed
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.

_
-'
- '
K.-,n~:n -

,
j',

Apprax. 4 years old a·nd
ground that is landscaped
I 3 bedrooms, an attached
ar~!~::'~~ garage. $39,900.00.
ll
- Near Meigs Mine M 1. 3 bedroom
ranch on 2'h acre ground. Large modern kltch«l
and · living room, storage shed and garden area.
ALL FOR ONLY $32,000.00.
NEW LISTING - With 5% down thiS 2 bedroom
home in the country can be purchased tor approx.
1:1% in~rest. House has new siding, new root, new
septic, new carpet, and front and rear porch.
$24,900.00.
NIW LISTING - In Middleport. A 2 story .frame
home with N bedrooms, dining room, living room,
large kitchen, and ·has new carpet throughout.
Home comn with several rooms full of almost new
furniture. Must see to believe. Just $.42,600.00.
LANDSCAPED FOR A TRA'ILER -And haswatar
and electric available. This 1.25 acre tot Is in the
SOUthern SchOOl District and is only $3,500.1111.
,·
tiGHT IUDGET- There Will be no problema with
this 5 room one floor plan home with 2 bedrooms,
dining, living room, kitchen, and large utility room,
piUs 1 garage llld h11 epprox. 1~ ecr~ JUST
$1i16 200.00.
H NT TO YOUR HEARTS DESIRE - On thil 56
ICrH. Mottly wooded but does hive some bull~ing
aitH. ASKING$23,900.00..
•
NIID4 BEDROOMS - Then l'h story f'i_lme home
11111 Wlll~ou need ftlth _a. flill basement, big lot, ,
gar1911 Is in town. $21;!00.00.
CLOII T TOWN·~ Arid would m1ke1 nice starter
home. This 51',!10m houR hn 2 btclrooms, basement, cellar, tnd • nice big yard. uo.ooo.oa.
LAilGI 2 STORY - With 4 big lots lnd 4 big ..
bldruoml. Houa, hU hid I lot Of remodeling lnd
h8111ce ctb'nets In"'- kitchen. Would m1kl11 nice
'lllllltfOI' Clltldl'fn; Clateto~neu. ttMOO.oo.
·
WI HAVI OV.IR . . P'IIIOP'IRTIII TO CHOOII
PROM. ITOP IY ANO LIT Ul IHDW THIM TO

7791.

........ ...........
.......
··~.._.,.,

RI!ALTOIII
HINIIIY I, CLELAND, Hill. 992-6U1
AIIOCIATII .
IIIDCII.'!I DOni I TUIIINIIltn-Nft
JIANTIIIUIIILL-OIIPICI ,._.,

PH. 992-7201
4·15-1 fTIO.

AlliENS.SPORT

NEW SlORE
Effective 4-6-81
MON. thru SAT.
9 to5
Closed Thursday
H ·l mo. pd .

Hrs. : Mon. -Fri.
9 A.M.·! : 30 P.M.

992-5682

SIDING

Ad lor Future Relerence

APP(IANCE SERVICE
Cali Ken Young

&amp; GOLD

COINS

985-3561

'12" 10 'lP

F'ARTS AND SERVICE
ALL MAKES
eWulll!n
eD!spos.11s

For Silver Dollars

1 Dryers

• Dishwutters
IHOIWiiltrT•nks

BISSEIIIH-.J~. ~spoc~"~'.~.~..~:~:·.~·•.:-.~

9 ~2ain

-- -

..-coull.. aundrits
..-Renl•l Pro,.rtlts

...- Apt. HouttOwntrs

..- Mobile Home P•rks

fnt A6ct 13.u ti.

71

'· -·· '. -

11

Htmt

__

J&amp;c :

j

For FUI Serv1ce

No Sunday Calls

storage

from 4x6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt.l, Box S4
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843-2!91
6·15·11&lt;

BUYING

94

New Homes • exteilSive remodel·mg.
t E lectrica I work
t Roofing work
12Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
j·26·1 mo.

Utility Buildings
Size~

"Beautiful, custom

GLINN

CONSTRUCTION.

Fann B11ildings
Sizes
"From lOx30"
SMALL

BISSEll
SIDING CO.

SILVER

ALL STEEL

1

i French City Painting.
Residential, commercial,
interior,
exterior .
Speclallrlng In Interior
74
M~torcycles
' painting, paper hanging e..
7092
textured eel II ngs. Freel
44
Aportmont
1979 Kowaskl 100, 522 ac· ntimales. 367·7784 or 367·
for Rent .
tual miln. $600.00. 949·24631 7160.
.
Two bedroom furnished after7p.m.
apartment. 992·5434 or 1·
1980 Kawasaki 250 LTOj
Play 11 smart ali day i~ classic 304-882·2566.
.Exc. cond. SBOO. 992-62.W.
partners that &amp;O lotelher!
WAT ,ER
WELLS ·i
Softly bloused top has Furnished 2 bedroom
Oomnlic
and
c~~r~:;~:~~~:::
"~
stairs
epartmelnn:rti.ldt.::::~t
~
11
1978
Handa
400
Hawk,
exc
..
crochele&lt;l neck ed&amp;e. sleeves in
pump sales end
1 cond. lot$ 01 extras. 992·. Tom
no pets: N
licy stitch to contrast lacy ilripes only,
Lewis Drilling.
741&gt;7 or 7-42-3154.
of blouse, skirt. Knit of sport 992·3874.
Seasonal discount on pum·
arn we•&amp;ht acrylic/wool. Pattern
ps. 1·304-895·3802 or 1·304·
2 bedroom furnished up- '~;::==c~o=m;p:,l;n,;::== I 895·3641.
092: Slii!S 10·16 include&lt;!.
aporlment. S150.
Equipment
1
$Z.OG lor eech pettern. Add stairs
month plus ulllltln. sso.
- ,
~01 lith Pltlern llw posiiCe deposit. No f¥!tS. Availabl• $collie camper tor seie.,
1nd btndlin&amp;.
te: May 1. Call 949-2875 aflerl 992·3791.
1
'
.....
3 · 4:30p.m.
nulmlllo.,l
... ' "' . '
1 room efficiency apart"
The DillY Sentinel
mont. 992·5434 or 182-2566. ·~~~·:----==.:....

.

I

• Dump Truck
L1censed &amp; Bo~ed

.

7 l Autos lor Sale
Built Garages"
Call
lor tree siding
1979 Corvette; mint
estimates, 949·2101 or
dillon; low mileage ·
949-2860.
options.
Reas~;~a.b:~~ ~ l
No Sunday Calls
priced. Aller 5 call·
3·11-tlc
or 378-6293.

1978 Fairmont
wagon. Am·lm B
Very nice 1974 Grandville: p.s., p.b., a.c:. $2,995.
3 bedroom, air, washer, 4175.

St••

.I

ROGER HYSEll'S BAILEY'S
GARAGE

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

Deposit. 992·2749.

l

eBackhoe
• Excavating
eSeptic Systems
eWater, Sewer &amp; Gas
Lines
·

Cali !'toward
949·2862
949·2160
2-4-tlc

2 bedroom Mobile Home
utilities paid, I child ac·
cepled, no pets. Bachelor
·apl. I bedroom. John
Sheets, 3'13 miles south of
Middleport Rt. 1.

I

ROOFING

Free Estimates
Reasonable Pr1ces

1

:'. •

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

All' types of root work,
new or repa~r gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed .

Ph.l67· 7!60

SANITATION
SERVICE
Trash Pickup In
The Village of ,
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-5016
or 992-7505
4·17-ttc

...

•. lllllllf . .
~ · .

Scout Camp ~&lt;d.
Chester, Oh. ,
,. Short go me practice
*Putting &amp; Chipping
Green Open
,. Hole-in-One
,. Pro-Golf lessons
for all ages
,. Repair: Cleaning,
refinishing, new grips
length change,
weight change
*Fast service

Ph. (614) •••;·'""

~H.~67·7671

,or 367-7560
CHE

BOWERS
REPAIR - ·sweepers.
toasters, Irons, all small 14
Electrlc11
appliances. Lawn mower.
&amp; Relrlgtrotion
. DOZER work. Small lobs
Next to State Highway
specialty. 7G·2753.
Garage on Route 7, 985· SEWING MACHINE
Repairs, service, all
3125.
makesl 992·2284. The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
AuthOr ired Singer . So in
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.
Cash 'n' Carry
1 Rolls
to handle ell your
KITCHEN
RU-BICk ·
neects. Repairs,
rt·wlrlng, in·
modlliCIIi011S.
From ·
R,.$15.95
reSidential,
.
(
Sq.'
,
No lob to
-'7.99 ., up
&amp; IP
Yd .
!Iaroe or to smoll. Avollable
lnstolltd
Caslt-n-Carry
.'" lnstolltd ' '
lmmtdiittly, Bill Cadit at

Funiture
Shop
SPRING CAIHI 'SALE
CARPET
1111 PADDIII

CMP.ET

'"""

SHAG

'12.95

·' ·
Buy Now &amp;Seve $2·$6 Per Yard.
25 rolls cartNtt · In stock to pick from.
Regullr· blcked carjief' lnstalled free,
wittl 111d. .
•
·
Drive A Little- Slve A Lot

FURNITURE
.
. 742-2211
"·

.'

I .

tanks~~~~~~~=~·~·~~~=======~t~=~~~;~~2;
ROUSH

tunished, adults preferred.

, IV 1

Call 742-3195
or 992-7680
2-B·tlc

H. L WHITESEL

I

REESE
TRENCHING

10 7 lie

4 14,000 gallon tanks
For rent or sale. Furnished located above ground at
house, 3 bedrooms, Brad· Athens, Oh. $3,000. each. 1·
bury area. No children or 304-422·2781.
pets. Aller 4 p.m. call 992·

awning,

your present electrical
system.
Residential
'-;&lt;;om mercia I

located above ground at
Four
Athens,15,000
Ohio.
gallon
$3,000.00
each. Phone1 ·30H22·2781 .

1974 Nova Hatchback
2 bedroom Mobile Home. power steering, oo••er 1
Racine area. 992·5858.
brakes, body's In
shape. Best offer. 992·67116!1
2 bedroom Mobile Home, or992·3941.

POMEROY, 0.

V,C, YOUNG II
9Y2-621S or ?92-7314
Pomeroy, 011

-Auto and Truck
Repair
- Transmission
Repair

carpeted,

Mobile Homes
42
lor Rent
2 bedroom Mobile Home.
Adults only . Brown's
Trailer Court, Minersville.
992·3324.

(FreeEstimates)

SERVICE
For all of your wiring needs .
Let George Miller check

Pels lor Sale

1 walker female, 4

Farm Equipment
remodeled kitchen &amp; both 61
in Pomeroy. $195. mo. plus
Used
R·40 Oilch Witch
util. Call alter 6 p.m. 992· Trencher.
1-614-694·7842.
2288.
--------3 bedroom house.
month , $100. de
i
References.
Close to mi
.
.
26.
1 742 21

electrical work

MILlER El£CTRIC,•

Pomeroy

4,1_..:..:H.:cou::.:sc:e=.s.:..:fo"'r"'R"'e"nl'-2 bedroom house, stove,
refrigerator,

FREE ESTIMATES
lorSyeartermite
guarantee
Located in Gallipolis
Ph. 614-446·2801
l-27;1

building, underpinning, set.
up on rented lot. 992·7479. ,

YQU.

i

I

. B:l

.
1

12 Situations Wontld
:~ ! ~ :
1
!Repair or remodeling,
,.
work, flooring, doors, ·wall ~ · • ·
jpanellng, ceiling, or floor1·~
tile, siding. 992·2759.

M-M. H. 1 - l r

.

spot.
harrisonville.
make In
excellent
trailer

-

:. . . _

to $38,700.00.
LOT- Approx. '~ acre
with water tap. Would

central

SHRUBS

Q

Vil lage. Price reduced

Vi n v1

SELECTION
' .

YOUR LAWN

~

'I.'
·---- -

17-u,.._,...qo

......

Office 742-2003
.
GeorgeS, Hobstener Jr.
Broker
NEW HOME - Be this
attractive home's first
owner. 3 bedroom, total
electric on nice size lot.
Located in Rutland

- Concrete work
-Plumbing and

r - - - - - - - ,,

I

FOR LANDSCAPING

HOBSTETTER

dryer,

H

IJ-O•er•l Hallll"f

t,JI

'

&amp;;: - ;

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

\

OF

Real Estate-General ,

'"

1.•:

- - - ·- - · -

AWIDE

':

FRIENDLY Home Parties ':;
now in our 26th year, iS e&gt;C· "'

.....,..

. .. .

· -

house, carpet, fireplace
sundeck, two car garage, 2'
and one half acres. Lovely
setting on s R 7 North. 992·
7741.

'

- - - - - - ' - - - ,,,.~

14-ltKtrlul

.:Ooll

Three or tour bedroom

mobile home with
on Iaroe rented lot,
1.0,
furnished, with washer and
dr~er, new carpel and
aluminum , building .
$5.400.00. 742·J025 or 992·
J027.

,.

. panding to your area, and :
has openings for managers~ .
and dealers. Party plan ex• 'lW
perience helpful. Car
phone necessar-y. CalFcarol Oay collect 518· 089-~

AT
POMEROY ,
LANDMARK.

·For sale or rent; 3

-~

2 9 tfc

Ants and other small in· '
sect control.
I

Real E51ate- General

Wanted. Share ride to
Athens, hrs. 8·5. Mon.· Fri.
Call992·3390 after 6:30p.m.

Available

LEO MORRIS
Rl. I Side Hill Rd.
Rutland, 0~ .

19781it=====~~~~~:::~~~==~=========

FOR SALE

Fashion Consultant n~·"'
NOW! Ladies fashion firm .'!
Average $8.00 per hour. .. ·•
For appointment interview • .;
caii992·3Ul between H . ':

_U - II'tum1t61111 ••etwlttfll

1

•

Housing
Headquarters

Beautiful three bedroom
ranch brick home In Baum
Addition, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Gas heat, central air. Call
992·2571, 985·4145 or 1-687·
6429.

_________. _

Cfi'"

lf..,.trUHtr

:·
;
,,

but yours lor onlyS7,500.
YOUR HOME IS YOUR
FA'MI LY TRADE ·
MARK. NEED A BET·
TE·R ONE CALL
992-3325 or 992-3876.

Need Money? Need
Clothes? Wh~ not get your
wardrobe af no cost to you
and earn extra dollars too?
For information or in·
lerview appointment call
992-3941 between9·9.

eSI!IIIVICI!S
..,_.~

1

" o

11-H..,IMIINYMtll~

WIM·Ad Ad•erllsint
Dud I I -

Hill 11

room and large lot.
$.40,000.
NEW LISTING - Only 2
yrs. old. Brick veneer
home, 21uil baths, base·
mont, Insulated, copper
plumbing, F.A. furnace
and 21ireplaces. Almost
4 acres. Easy terms.
160,000.
IN GOOD SHAPE 66x100 lot/garage, 3
bedrooms, nice base·
m~tnt, good carpeting,
storm windows &amp; drs .•
natural gas F.A. fur·
nlll;j, dining and nice
viewdl town. $27,500.
NEW LISTING - Smail

home, small price. 4
room house with 4.75
acre. Needs some work ·

$185.00 to $500 weekly doing :~ ,

Ft;-VIM &amp; 41W.D.

...

===:::

I ,,, ..__ _ _ __
I

Pu~lic

in' •the kitchen, flower

."

---- -·

bath,

new ·gas F .A. furnace,
dining, lois 01 cabinets

·r

..'"

eTRANSPOIITATION

eiiEAL ESTATE
,,_.._..
.........

29._ _ _ _ _7.---:-----1I 8.
_ _ _ _ __

I
I

eMERCHANDISE
S1- Hous .... ICI GtMs

15-Sctl0olllnltrvd11M'i

4
I 5.
- .26·
-1
_. _
_____
27.--~-~_ _ _ _ __
I 6. _ _ _ _ __

I

0-FII:oom•
46-Sp.cttor•tnl
41-WtntM to Rtflf
41-Equlpmtnt for hnt

1- Pullhc Stl•
1 AucliOfl

1 2. - - - - - - . 2 4 - - - - - ·25. _ _ _ _ __
1 3·

11

41-Houstslor R•nl
42-Mobllt Homes
lor Rent
4._A,.rtmtnl tor Jltnl

6-Lost tnclll'ound

I

eRENTALS

-··

Notice
are hereby replaced, in- the office of the District
sofar as they are in· Deputy Director.
consistent herewith .
The Director reserves
SECTON 3. That this or· the 'tight to reject any and
dinance shall take effect' all bids.
and be in Ioree from and at·
DAVIOL. WEIR
ter the earliest period
DIRECTOR
allowed by law.
, Rev . 8·17·73
1
Passed the 13th day 01
April1981
· W 20. 27, 2tc
Attest. Jon Buck
Clerk
M. L. Kelly
Public Notice
Public No1ice

Curb Inflation. !.
parts thereof, that are in·
herewith
and the same
Pay Cash for
1,
CIa ssifieds and /: J.r---'---'-w-~-NT-_A-:-D-=.IN-FO'--RM_A_TI-ON'-- - ~ ~e"t"-~dJ.!~!e.~'--.~:-.;:-_- ·.

J

IIl

.

Public Notice
Public Notice
!Amended) .
537.14
ORDINANCE
Oomestic Violence !Ad·
NO. 1108-81
ded) .
An
Ordin
Chapter 513. Drug Abllsel AUTHORIZING
Conl~oi !Amended).
MAYOR TO ENTER
Temporary Protection
A CONTRACT
der( dded) .
COLUMBUS
Se lion Ill. This Or· SOUTHERN OHIO
dina ce is hereby declared TRIC COMPANY
to
e an emergency L1G HT 1 NG
meas reandil51mmediate STREETS, A
pass ge is necessary in or· LANES.c.. AND .-uaLtlL
der o preserve, prQtect P LAC t S I N
and alntain the health, VILLAGE OF
Safety and welfare of the OLE PORT AND
cilire!lsofMiddleporl, Ohio THE RATES !'~~"'~l!
and for the further reason CHARGED FOR
that if is necessary to bring SERVICES.
lhe Traffic and General Of·
Be it ordained by the
lenses Codes inlo com- Counci l of the VILLAGE
pllance with current State OF Ml DOLEPORT a~
law as required by Article tallows:
XVIII Section 3 01 the Ohio
Sec. 1. Thatrhe Mayor of
Const tution.
the Village 01 Middleport,
SE TION IV . This Or· Ohio is hereby authorized
dinan e sha ll take effect to enter into a contract on
and be In Ioree im· behalf of said Village with
medi te ly following its Columbus and Southern
passa e and approval.
Ohio Electric Company,•
Pas ed the 13th day ot and Ohio corporation, for
April198i.
lighting the streets, alleys,
Altest: Jon Buck
lanes and public places in
Clerk
'
said Village at the rates
and upon the terms and
M. L. Kelly conditions specified in the
President of form of the attached con
Council tract.
(4) 20, ~7. 2tc
SECTION 2. That all or·

codification of such ordinances, together with the

adopted.
SECT ION

.

new

All Models

,. S225.1111 Parts &amp; Labor
Plus Fluid.
,. 24 Hour Wrecker.
Service
,. Triple A All'ill~t.~.

Beautiful red
Kawasaki Kr 650 Sr, tow· ~
mileage, loaded with ex··l i r ' - - - - - - - - , . l l·r----::"Y"'O-:-U-N-G-.,-S-...,.-;•
tras
lor sale or trade,
35
Lots &amp; Acreage
12,000.00. Also good used
TERMITE owl
CARPENTER
.
a,ll"_
8 acres more or less lor c. b.'s, 8 track tape players,
sale. $11,000. 992·2292.
and speakers. Good por ·
SERVICES"
PEST CONTROL
,tableblackandwhitet.v.'s.
See at Uncle Buddys Trade
-Addon• and
n Post., 92 Olive Street,
Roaches,
Birds ,
remodeling
Gallipol is.
Rodents, Spiders, Fleas,
-:~~ing and gutter

31
lu r, EmBy Albeck, Ben Bell, Scott Gilkey, Wendy
Gilkey, Tammy Gilkey, Georie Eric Gryuka; back, I
lu r, Jon Bell, Mn. Patty Aabeck, advisor; IJnda
Riggs, Katrina Donohue, Lisa Riggs, Kenda Douobue
and Ben Davl~.

·on

• cars.

nished, washer and dryer,

-

HJ S0"-21)-JOli. P.
60"-25·60 H.P.
60"-45-80 H. P .

most American Model

air conditioning, porch and
.awning, metal building. Set
up on rented lot. $7000.00.
Call992·3679 or 992·3027.

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
-

Transmissions

Granville ,mobile •
home, 3 · bedrooms, fur·

VISIT PAPER- MembetB of the Melp County
Youug Wrlten Club vlsiled tbe offices cl The Dally
Sentinel Friday mol'lling wheni they were iDslnleled In
the use of faelliUes and genelill procedures by Mn.
KaUe Crow, Mn. Brenda Davis and Mn. Charlene
Hoeflich, staff memben. Maklag the viBJI were front, I

-

"' PH. 949-1!m .
,. Complete Auto and
Tcuck Repair
• R'tbullt Automatic

1915

.,

-

DIStil St.. Rtctne, Oh-;

8x4.5 2 bedroom mobile
home. Real good. S1.950.
Brown's Trailer Park. 992·
3324.

Zion Church to be site of club plantings

The loth birthday of Latisha Price
· ·as observed Saturday with a party.
A doll replica cake was served with
ice cream and punch. Games were
played with prizes being awarded to
the winners. Attending were Karrie
Johnson, Sonya Johnson, Jeremy
Johnson, Shelly Black, Amy Johnson, UJa Johnson, Kim Eblin. Sending cards and gifts were Mr. and
Mrs. Jeffers, Teresa Brown, Cindy
«~fills, Patty and Phyllis Dugan.

Grandparents are John and Dorthy Golowenslti, Lorain, and John
and Eleanor Blaettnar, Pomeroy.
Mrs. Angeline Degan and Peter Recutik of Lorain are paternal greatgrandparents, and the maternal
great-grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Satterfield, Sr., Middleport, and Mrs. Margaret Blaettnar, Pomeroy.

Business Services

.,. _ _

ll

~

•••

1

�. . . . . .- - - ..
.

I

I

13 die on Ohi() highways.
11)''111eAIIocllltedPreu
Medina ·in a one-car 1111Ubup on
LISBON-Wamnl).Wolfe,at,Cif
A rash
. of fatal accidents SwJdaY Ohio zs2in Medina ~ty.
. WeiiiYille In a ~ 111)ralsed Ohio's weekend traffic death
AKRON- Sharon R. Meier, 25, Clf Ctdel¢ on QIU 4,1 In .Colnmh!•na
• ton to 13, the HlghwBy Patrol aafd. Panua, · in a two-car collllion on·· County.
.
~
Of nine fatalities COWited Sunday, OhloB2tnSummltCounty.
IIA'nJIID.b
·.
three were motorcycltlts and •two
FREMONT- RuWll KoVach, 28, TOiEDO...: GteCOIJ 1•hmln, II, Clf
werepedeslriana.
Port citnlon, when bla motorcy~ - ~ In a .-.r ~~~. on
The patrol COWits traffic deaths collidedwlth'anuthervehlclelllotlio ()b!oll4tnll'ultaiiCuallty.
,
Clf
from 8p.m. Friday to midnight SWI- 53tn San&lt;iulkl County. · .
- MAJUETTA.~ William Hall, "'
da
BOWlJNG{ GREEN - Anthony · Beverly, in a -accident-on
dead:
19, 8owllng Green, when Wublllcton County !llld.,
t
SUNDAY
hewbsiruckbyaautoon0hlo25in
CLEVELAND - Demen ··
ELYRIA- Andrew P. Sasack, 5, of Wood County.
Wlllilml, Jl, Clf Clevellnd, lila ~
Elyria, when struck by a car on Ohio
CINmfflA'q - Gary Redmond, .car accident 01) a Cleveland uoz.
10 in Lorain County.
.
· 42, ctnctrlnati, in a CIIM81' cruh on stnet.
MANSFIELD - Terry E. Snipes, a county road in Hamilton County.
FRJDAYNIGRI'
22, of Plymouth, in a motorcycle acCLEVELAND - David Jones, '11, FREMONT - 01'11 Krober, 15,
cident on Ohio 803tn Richland Coun- of Cleveland, in a two-car accident GlbloQburg, in a C11J11oc1r crub on.a
ty.
on a Cleveland city alreet.
Sandnoky CouDty !llld.
MEDINA- Diane Walkins, 16, fl. ,-----,;""--:--'-'----...:..::..-'-......:-~......:--...;;.-

~.

the

PROGRESS - 1881 OR 1981? - Many of the
stnela In Racine resembled "bone and buggy" days
at the l1u'll of the century, after beavy rains pollllds
areas recently excavated lor the new Racine-Syracuse
sewer system project Many main street&amp;, Including

r

sectlou of State Routes 124 and 338, were left m_.,
covered and very rough. Water-filled potholes, up to
sill Inches deep, were disguised by lite recent
precipitation, leaving some motorlsla wltb flat tires,
and without hubcaps.

Announce
grant
] 10 emergency l'UDl!
,.m,._.,-.,.,.,_ approval

Area deaths

Edward M. (Eddie) Blake, 39,
well
known
Middleport
businessman, died at his home in
Middleport Sunday afternoon
following a lingering illness.
Mr. Blake was born on Nov. 24,
1941 at Mason W. Va., a son of the
' .
'
late Edward M. and Ruth Tracy
Blake.
He worked as a conductor for
Conrall and was owner and operator
of the R. F;. Tracy Fire and Safety
Equiprnen~ Co. He was owner and
operator of Max's Inc., a restaurant
on South Third Ave., in Middleport.
He served as legislative representative for the U. T.U. of Conrail. Mr.
Blake was a member of Heath
United Methodist Church.
Surviving are his wife, Joyce;
three daughters, Ruth Ann, Kathy
Lynn and Amy Joyce, and a son,
Max Edward Blake, all at home; a
brother and sister-in-law, John T.
and Margie Blake, Middleport; a
sister and brother-in-law, Cherole
and Newman Burdette, Middleport;
an uncle and aunt, George and Mary
Ingels, New Haven, W. Va.; an uncle, Radford Ingels, Upland, Calif.,
two cousins, Harry and Jack Elder,
Columbus; his mother-in-law, Mrs.
Jewel Case, Columbus, and several

-ELBERFELD$.WAREHOUSE. .

lirxxll/fiuTDotll

Local emergency units answered

·

Edward M. Blake
nieces and nephews.
Services will be conducted at 2
p.m. Tuesdajltat the [RawlingsCoats-Blower Funeral Home with
the Rev. Robert Robinson and the
Rev. Max Donahue officiating.
Burial will be in Riverview
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 7 to 9 this evening
and from 10 a.m. to 12 noon Tuesday.

Anna W. L i t e r - - - - - - - - - - Anna Wilhelmina Liter, 74, Rt. I,
Long Bottom, died SWlday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Liter was preceded in death
by her parents Hiram and
Wilhelmina Defenbaugh Hensley,
her husband, Anton Liter who died in
1977. two brothers, Dana and
Charles Hensley, one sister, Iva Car·
penter and one ste!&gt;'daughter, Doris
Haley.
Sbe attended Eagle Ridge Community Church and was a member
of the Long Bottom Senior Citizens
Club.

f

She is survived by lne son,
Richard Liter, Rt. I, Lon~ Bottom ;
one daughter, Diana Evans, Rt. 1,
Long Bottom; two brotljers, John
Hensley, Long Bottom and George
Hensley, Rt. 1, Long B~om; one
sister, Margaret Murray1 Ironton;
five grandchildren and two great
grandchildren.
Funeral services will~
be eld Wednesday at I p.m. at E · g Chapel
with Mr. Steve Botha ficiating.
Burial will be in Rainllow Ridge
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home after 7 p.m. this
evening.

Emergency Medical Service reports.
On Saturday, the Pomeroy Unit at
. 5:09 a.m. too~ Lora Gilpin from
Pomeroy Health Care Center to
Holzer Medical Center; at 2:17p.m.,
Tammy Cornwell from the Pomeroy
Cliff Apartments to Pleasant V&amp;!ley
Hospital, and at 7:36 p.m..' Christy
Laudennilt from Mechanic St., to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; the
Tuppers Plains Unit at 11 :05 a.m.
took Charles Hubbard, Reedsville,
to St. Joseph Hospital, Parkersburg
and the Middleport Unit at 4:24p.m.
took Sally Lambert from Brownell
Ave., to Veterans Memorial.
On Sunday at 5:03 p.m., the
Racine Unit took Allen Wilson from
Letart Falls to Veterans Memorial
and the RuUand Unit at 3:11 a.m.
took Connie Mash from Happy
Hollow to Holzer Medical Center.
The Pomeroy Unit at 4:36 a.m.
took Frank Musser from his residence to Veterans Memorial and at 6:48
a.m. took Eugene Smith from
Pomeroy Cliff Apartments to
Veterans Memorial and at 5:17p.m.
took Annie Liter from Rainbow
Ridge to Veterans Memorial.

•
Gov. James A. Rhodes today announced approval of a $2,640 grant
fiom the Appalachian Regional
Commission (ARC) to .the Ohio
Department of Economic and
munity Development (DECO) to be
made available by DECO as a Seed ·
money Joan to the Meigs County .
CoWlcll~ Aging. The grant·will be '
supple ted with se&amp;O fl'OI'n !Ileal . i

qom-

sources.

PRICES EFFECTIVE THE WEEK OF
APRIL27, 1981. OUANTnY RIGHTS RESERVED.

··

The council is a non-profit 1
organization involved in the develOpment of 36 units of congregate
busing for the elderly and han- .
dicapped. Funding for this project .
will be used to pay for a site and
location study.
The project was submitted for approval by the Department of
Economic and Community Development's ApPalachian Department Of.
flee, which administers the ARC
program in Ohio.
·
Ohio's 1980 Appalachian Development Plan and Project Investment
Package contains approXImately
f/.9 million in funding proposals for
Ohio's 28 Appalachian counties In
areas of health, child development,
energy, education and natural .

resources.

USDA Choice Beef Center Blade Cut

Chuck s 29
Roast

~6 ft. and ·12 ft. widths in Stade

-Green ar black!pn Tweed
-Easy to instal
Only

lb.

'4·~YD.

INSTALLATION

Crisp Fresh

Iceberg
Lettuce

AV~JLA....,._ ..

ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE
MECHA·N·Ic sT.,

POMIROY' - ·

VAN CAMP'S

Pork and

Student
apparently
drowns

The body of a 17-year-old Point
Pleasant High School student was
found in a creek by a fiBbing companion Saturday afternoon, the
Mason County Sheriff's Department
reported today.
The victim was identified as
Wllllam Dale Carr of Gallipolis ·
Ferry.
Carr and the companipn, Ricky
Layne Pinkerman of Rt. 2, Gallipolis
Ferry, had been fishing in Crab
Creek when the victim moved to
another fishing spot.
Veterans Memorial
OAPSE meeting slated When Pinkennan went to ·that
location an hour later, Carr's body
Saturday Admissions-Margaret
An OAPSE meeting will be held was in the creek.
Y\lS~ Minersville; Kenneth Im- Tuesday, Apri128, at 7:30p.m. in the
A spokesman said Carr was sub- .
boden, Middleport; Carl Shultz, cafeteria at Meigs Junior High, Midject
to epUeptic seizures. However,
Racine.
dleport.
the
youth's
body was sent to the
Saturday Discharges-Mamie
Representative Dexter Blair will state medical examiner's office in
Hendricks, Tabitha Roush, Erma be present and there will be an elecHollon, Helen Lochary, Marie Roy, tion of officers. All members are South Charleston for an autopsy since there were no eyewitnesses to his
Caroline Ohlinger, Carl Shultz.
urged to attend.
death.
Sunday Admissioiur-Joan Conkle,
The matter remains under inCheshire; Frank Musser, Pomeroy;
vestigation
pending the state
Georgia Swartiger, Pomeroy; Meets Wednesday
medical
examiner's.
report.
Lucille Braley, Pomeroy; Mabel
The Wildwood Garden Club will . Carr is survived by his parents,
Barrett, Vinton.
meet Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the Francis Dale Carr and Clara '
Sunday Discharges-Louella King, home of Mrs. Mary Nease.
Virginia Campbell Carr, and one
Kathy Fife, Clyde Smith.
brother, Howard Lee Carr, at home.

head

16oz.S

Beans

cans
for

CHICKEN OF THE SEA
Oil or Water Pack

Tuna

6* oz.

can

with coupon

Meigs County happenings •••

CINCINNATI
REDS BASEBALL SPECIAL
Cincinnati Reds Vs San Diego Padres

Thinking ·about

b~ying

Supplement to: Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

a new car?
.

The Farmers Bank is making
new car loans.

298 Second St.

CoJJ~e

in and talk to u~ ab~ut ogr i
competitive rates on n~w car 1oans.
1

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Cable Gives You More
Watch This Paper For Schedule Of Seven
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Your Comm nity Owned &amp;,nk

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TUESDAY, APRIL 28TH AT 7:20 P.M.

EXCLUSIVELY ON CABLE CHANNEL 3

YALU
Pomeroy, Ohio

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